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            Title United States v. $92,422.57

 

            Date 2002

            By Alito

            Subject Criminal Law

                

 Contents

 

 

Page 1





LEXSEE 307 F3D 137


UNITED STATES OF AMERICA v. NINETY-TWO THOUSAND FOUR HUNDRED TWENTY-TWO DOLLARS AND FIFTY-SEVEN CENTS ($ 92,422.57), UNITED STATES CURRENCY SEIZED FROM PNC BANK ACCOUNT # 8400369727 HELD IN THE NAME OF KIM'S WHOLESALE DISTRIBUTORS, INC.; KIM'S WHOLESALE DISTRIBUTORS, INC., Appellant


No. 00-4348


UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT



307 F.3d 137; 2002 U.S. App. LEXIS 19750


December 6, 2001, Argued

September 20, 2002, Filed


PRIOR   HISTORY:             **1        ON   APPEAL   FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE EASTERN  DISTRICT  OF  PENNSYLVANIA.  (Dist. Court No. 00-cv--03548). District Court Judge:  Stewart Dalzell.


DISPOSITION: Judgment of forfeiture vacated and case remanded for further proceedings concerning this issue only.


LexisNexis(R) Headnotes



COUNSEL: David M. Howard,  Stephen J. McConnell

(Argued), Dechert, Price and Rhoads, Philadelphia, PA. Catherine M. Recker, Welsh & Recker, Philadelphia, PA, Counsel for Appellant.


Michael L. Levy, Robert A. Zauzmer, Christopher R. Hall

(Argued), Office of United States Attorney, Philadelphia, PA, Counsel for Appellee.


JUDGES:               Before:    ALITO,   AMBRO,                and GREENBERG, Circuit Judges. AMBRO, Circuit Judge, dissenting.


OPINIONBY: ALITO


OPINION:   *141


OPINION OF THE COURT


ALITO, Circuit Judge:


This is an appeal from a judgment of civil forfeiture for funds from a bank account owned by Kim's Wholesale Distributors, Inc. ("Kim's"). The complaint claimed that the  funds  were  subject  to  forfeiture  under  18  U.S.C.  §


981(a)(1)(A) on the ground that they had been involved in transactions in violation of the money laundering statute,

18 U.S.C. § 1956. Proof supporting the forfeiture was ob- tained from business records seized from   *142   Kim's pursuant to a warrant issued by a United States Magistrate Judge in connection **2  with a wide-scale investigation of illegal trafficking in food stamps.


Kim's  moved  to  suppress  the  evidence  under  the Fourth  Amendment  n1  and  to  dismiss  the  complaint. When the District Court denied those motions, the parties entered into a stipulation under which Kim's conceded that it had no defense to the forfeiture action, final judgment was entered against Kim's in the amount of $92,422.57, and Kim's retained the right to appeal the District Court's ruling on its motion to suppress and dismiss. The District Court entered judgment against Kim's in the amount of

$92,422.57, and this appeal followed. n2 For the reasons stated below, we reject Kim's arguments relating to prob- able cause and particularity, but we find the record inade- quate to resolve Kim's argument concerning the seizure of documents written in Chinese, and we therefore vacate the judgment and remand for further proceedings regarding that issue.


n1            In             One         1958       Plymouth               Sedan     v. Pennsylvania, 380 U.S. 693, 700, 14 L. Ed. 2d 170,

85 S. Ct. 1246 (1965), the Supreme Court held that the Fourth Amendment's exclusionary rule applies to forfeiture  cases  because  "a forfeiture  proceed- ing  is  quasi-criminal  in  character."  However,  in recent  years,  the  Supreme  Court  has  declined  to extend the exclusionary rule to a variety of non- criminal proceedings. See e.g., Pennsylvania Bd. of Prob. and Parole v. Scott, 524 U.S. 357, 369, 141 L. Ed. 2d 344, 118 S. Ct. 2014 (1998)(a parole board may  consider  evidence  obtained  in  violation  of


307 F.3d 137, *142; 2002 U.S. App. LEXIS 19750, **2

Page 2

















**3










I.



the Fourth Amendment when making a recommit- tal determination); Immigration and Naturalization Serv. v. Lopez-Mendoza, 468 U.S. 1032, 1050-51,

82 L. Ed. 2d 778, 104 S. Ct. 3479 (1984)(declin- ing to apply the exclusionary rule to civil depor- tation hearings held by the INS); United States v. Janis, 428 U.S. 433, 447, 49 L. Ed. 2d 1046, 96 S. Ct. 3021 (1976)(refusing to apply the exclusionary rule to federal civil tax proceedings). In this case, the government does not contest the applicability of One 1958 Plymouth Sedan.





n2 Here, unlike in Verzilli v. Flexon, Inc., 295

F.3d 421 (3d Cir. 2002), we have appellate juris- diction because reversal would not result in a "full trial." Id. at 425.



fidential  informant  sold  Wang  "$  3,030  in  food stamps  for  $2,100  in  cash."  JA  at  120.  After  the sale, Government agents watched Wang walk to a Chinese restaurant with the stamps purchased from the informant. Wang then went to another Chinese restaurant and to Hing Loong Food Market. A few days later, an agent retrieved food stamp book cov- ers from the $3,030 in food stamps sold to Wang from  the  garbage  receptacle  outside  Hing  Loong Food Market. The stamps had cancellation mark- ings from Hing Loong Food Market.


On March 18, 1997, the confidential informant introduced  Wang  to  Secret  Service  Agent  Chan. Agent  Chan  indicated  that  he  sold  bulk  quanti- ties of food stamps for cash. During this contact,

"Wang told Agent Chan that he had seven grocery stores through which he redeemed food stamps and that he and his partners had already redeemed over one million dollars worth of food stamps ." Id. at

121. Wang further stated that he could "take up to


In October 1996, the government received anonymous letters implicating two individuals, Qiang Wang and Qun Chen,  in  an  elaborate  food  stamp  trafficking  scheme. According  to  the  letters,  Chinese  take-out  restaurants were buying food stamps from low-income food stamp recipients for seventy cents on the dollar. JA at 107. It was alleged that the restaurants were then reselling the food stamps to a partnership (the "Wang-Chen Partnership") for ninety cents on the dollar. The partnership,  in turn, was  allegedly  redeeming  the  food  stamps  through  gro- cery stores that did little if any legitimate business. Id. The partnership allegedly opened stores, operated them for a time, and then closed them to avoid paying taxes. Id. The letters named three stores, Wyoming Variety Store, Tasker Grocery Store, and Jacky's Food, that they claimed were operating solely for the purpose of trafficking food stamps. Id.   **4


After  receiving  the  letters,  the  Secret  Service  and






















**5

$100,000  in  food  stamps  at  one  time."  Id.  Wang gave Agent Chan $18,000 in cash for $30,000 in food stamps, which were then redeemed by Hing Loong Food Market and Wyoming Variety. Id. at

121-22.


On April 4, 1997, Wang called the confidential informant and told him that he had six individuals who would like to buy any amount of food stamps that Agent Chan could obtain. Id. at 122. On May

8, 1997, another Secret Service agent posed as an associate of Chan's and met with Wang to sell him

$100,000 in food stamps for $60,000 in cash. Id. During this meeting, Wang told the agent that he would  redeem  $70,000  of  the  $100,000  in  food stamps through his businesses and would resell the

$30,000 balance to other parties. Id. at 123.

Department  of  Agriculture  began  an  extensive  investi- gation. In the spring of 1997, "undercover Secret Service agents sold more than $130,000 in food stamps" to the members of the Wang-Chen Partnership for sixty cents on the dollar. n3 Id. at 106. Those food stamps   *143  were later redeemed through Wyoming Variety, one of the three stores named in the letter, and two others, Gou Bao Grocery and Hing Loong Food Market and Trading, Inc. Id. A sixth store, Zheng's Grocery, was later identified. Id. at 108. A review of the bank records of five of these six stores revealed that they had "collectively redeemed over $12,000,000 in food stamps since April 1994." Id.


n3  For  example,  on  March  11,  1997,  a  con-

The  investigation  yielded  substantial  evidence  that these stores did "little if any legitimate retail food busi- ness." Id. at 109. Agents videotaped customer traffic in and out of Gao Bao Grocery and found that on average only  eight  customers  a  day  left  with  a  bag.  The  store received few deliveries: a man "carried two to three plas- tic grocery bags into the store on approximately twenty- one occasions between January and April 1997." Id. at

137. Yet Gao Bao deposited $1,885,205 in food stamps between September 23, 1996, and May 31, 1997. Id. at

138.  The  store  would  have  had  "to  turn  over  a  $5,000 inventory ten times a week to generate these sales." Id. Wyoming  Variety,  which  had  no  cash  register  and  was sparsely stocked with a small supply of canned foods and


307 F.3d 137, *143; 2002 U.S. App. LEXIS 19750, **5

Page 3



beverages,  nevertheless  redeemed  "$  308,359  a  month on  average"  in  food  stamp  deposits.  Id.  at  140-41.  A mail carrier who delivered mail around noon to Jacky's Grocery  reported  that  the  store  was  closed  85%  of  the time;  nevertheless, between March 6, 1995, and March

28, 1996, Jacky's "deposited $2,735,573 in food stamps," which "accounted for 99% of all its  business receipts." Id. at 147-48.


Tasker Grocery's mail carrier **6   reported that "the door  was  always  locked  .  .  .  .  There  were  never  any customers."  Id.  at  150.  But  Tasker  Grocery  redeemed

$2,004,164 in food stamps between April 1,  1994,  and March 22, 1995. Id. Food stamps accounted for 99% of all its deposits. Id.


Officers videotaped Zheng's Grocery between May 13 and May 16, 1996. The videotape disclosed an employee enter the store at about 8:30 a.m. and lock the door be- hind him. People who tried to enter the store were unable to do so. The employee left at 4:30 p.m. and locked the door  behind  him.  There  were  no  deliveries.  Id.  at  152. However, between December 26, 1995, and October 18,

1996, Zheng's redeemed $2,383,296 in food stamps. Id. Zheng's  deposited  only  $900  in  cash  during  this  entire period. Id. at 153.


The  investigation  also  produced  evidence  that  the sham store owners withdrew food stamp proceeds from their  bank  accounts   *144    by  checks  made  payable either to cash, to the store owners, to an employee of a take-out restaurant, or to one of a group of wholesale food companies -- including Kim's. Id. at 109, 161. Indeed, all of the sham grocery stores "drafted a substantial number of checks to Kim's despite the fact that the stores were

**7   selling little if any food inventory." Id. at 161. For example, Zheng's Grocery drafted $951,603 in checks to Kim's and Wyoming Variety drafted $46,503 in checks to Kim's despite doing little legitimate business. Id. at 162. After reviewing canceled checks drafted by sham grocery stores to Kim's, an agent determined that Kim's had de- posited $399,389.20 from these sources into its account at PNC Bank since September 11, 1996. Id. at 164.


The  sham  grocery  store  owners  drafted  checks  to Kim's in a manner designed to conceal the proceeds of the  food  stamp  trafficking  scheme  and  make  it  appear that  the  stores  were  purchasing  significant  food  inven- tory. According to the investigating agents,  food stamp traffickers mistakenly believe that checks for more than

$10,000  result  in  the  filing  of  a  Currency  Transaction Report  or  a  Suspicious  Activity  Report,  n4  id.  at  118, and the vast majority of the checks drafted to Kim's by Gou Bao Grocery and Zheng's Grocery were in amounts just below $10,000. Id. 163, 164. Zheng's Grocery often drafted more than one check a day to Kim's. For example,



on July 1, 1996, Zheng's drafted four checks to Kim's in the following amounts:  $9,400, $9,300; $ **8    9,200, and  $9,100.  Id.  at  163.  Gou  Bao  wrote  checks  for  just under $10,000 several times a week. Id. at 164.


n4 In fact, only cash transactions result in the filing of such reports. 31 U.S.C. § 5313(2000); 31

C.F.R. § 103.22 (2001).



Two lead case agents --  Senior Special Agent Debra Thomerson,  from  the  Department  of  Agriculture,  and Special Agent Glen McElravy, from the Secret Service-- swore  out  an  affidavit  in  support  of  a  master  search warrant for numerous locations, including Kim's. Agent Thomerson had been involved in over 100 investigations involving  the  illegal  use  of  food  stamps,  had  received special training in the area of food stamp trafficking, and was a specialist in the documentation, identification, and retrieval of food stamps. Special Agent McElravy had as- sisted in numerous money laundering investigations and had received special training in identifying assets subject to forfeiture due to involvement in money laundering of- fenses. The affidavit underlying the search **9   warrant set forth facts to show that Kim's was a participant in an ongoing and extensive scheme to traffic in food stamps, in violation of 7 U.S.C. §§ 2024 (b) and (c) (food stamp fraud), 18 U.S.C. § 1956 (money laundering), 18 U.S.C.

§1956 (h) (money laundering conspiracy), and 18 U.S.C. §

371 (conspiracy). The warrant application was presented to and signed by a Magistrate Judge on September 11,

1997. The warrant authorized the seizure of the following

Kim's records:


1. Receipts, invoices, lists of business asso- ciates, delivery schedules, ledgers, financial statements,  cash receipt,  disbursement,  and sales journals, and correspondence.


2. Computers, computer peripherals, related instruction manuals and notes, and software in order to conduct an off-site search for elec- tronic copies of the items listed above.



Id. at 181.


When the warrant was executed, numerous documents were seized from Kim's premises, including handwritten notes on   *145   brown paper bags recording food stamp transactions, invoices to Chinese restaurants documenting the exchange of food stamps for Kim's products at a dis- count to **10  face value, and an accounting journal cat- aloging bulk food stamp transactions. Two journals vol- unteered by an employee revealed bulk food stamp trans-


307 F.3d 137, *145; 2002 U.S. App. LEXIS 19750, **10

Page 4



actions and documented that Kim's bought food stamps at a discount to face value from at least 19 restaurants in re- turn for wholesale food products, that Kim's redeemed the food stamps through three grocery stores, and that Kim's deposited  checks  from  the  grocery  stores  into  its  bank accounts.  See  id.  at  187-188.  Kim's  then  sold  the  ille- gally obtained food stamps for 90-92 cents to the Wang- Chen  Partnership's  sham  grocery  stores,  and  the  sham grocery stores paid with checks drawn on the stores' bank accounts. Id. at 35.

II. A.


Kim's  argues  that  the  District  Court  erred  in  refus- ing  to  suppress  evidence  obtained  in  the  search  of  its premises because the warrant was not supported by prob- able cause and did not particularly describe the items to be seized. The government counters that the warrant was supported by probable cause and that, in any event, the

"good faith" exception to the exclusionary rule, adopted in United States v. Leon, 468 U.S. 897, 82 L. Ed. 2d 677,

104  S.  Ct.  3405  (1984),  applies.  Under  Leon,  if a  mo- tion **11   to suppress evidence obtained pursuant to a warrant does not present a Fourth Amendment argument that should be decided in order to provide instruction to law enforcement or to magistrate judges, it is appropriate for a reviewing court to turn "immediately to a consider- ation of the officers' good faith." Id. at 925. In this case, we  do  not  think  that  Kim's  probable  cause  and  partic- ularity  arguments  "involve  .  .  .  'novel  questions  of  law whose resolution is necessary to guide future action by law enforcement officers and magistrates,' " United States v. Satterwhite, 980 F.2d 317, 320 (5th Cir. 1992) quoting Illinois v. Gates, 462 U.S. 213, 264, 76 L. Ed. 2d 527, 103

S. Ct. 2317 (1983), and we therefore turn directly to the good faith issue. See, e.g ., United States v. Taylor, 119

F.3d 625,  629 (8th Cir. 1997); United States v. Zayas- Diaz, 95 F.3d 105, 112 (1st Cir. 1996); United States v. Cancelmo, 64 F.3d 804, 807 (2d Cir. 1995); Satterwhite,

980 F.2d at 320.


B.


Under Leon, suppression of evidence "is inappropri- ate when an officer executes a search in objectively rea- sonable reliance on a warrant's **12   authority." United States  v.  Williams,  3  F.3d  69,  74  (3d  Cir.  1993).  The Supreme Court developed the exclusionary rule to deter unlawful police conduct. Leon, 468 U.S. at 906. However, where  law  enforcement  officers  act  in  the  "objectively reasonable belief that their conduct d oes  not violate the Fourth Amendment," "the marginal or nonexistent deter- rent  benefits produced by suppressing evidence obtained in objectively reasonable reliance on a subsequently inval-



idated search warrant cannot justify the substantial costs of exclusion." Id. at 918, 922. Therefore, if an officer has obtained a warrant and executed it in good faith, "there is no police illegality and thus nothing to deter." Id. at 921. To determine the applicability of the good faith excep- tion to the exclusionary rule, we ask "whether a reason- ably well trained officer would have known that the search was illegal despite the magistrate's authorization." United States v.   *146   Loy, 191 F.3d 360, 367 (3d Cir. 1999) quoting Leon, 468 U.S. at 922 n.23. The fact that an officer executes a search pursuant to a warrant typically "suffices to prove that **13   an officer conducted a search in good faith and justifies application of the good faith exception." United States v. Hodge, 246 F.3d 301, 308 (3d Cir. 2001) citing Leon, 468 U.S. at 922. Nevertheless, we have iden- tified four narrow situations in which an officer's reliance

on a warrant is not reasonable:



(1) when the magistrate judge issued the war- rant in reliance on a deliberately or recklessly false affidavit;


(2) when the magistrate judge abandoned his judicial role and failed to perform his neutral and detached function;


(3) when the warrant was based on an affi- davit "so lacking in indicia of probable cause as  to  render  official  belief  in  its  existence entirely unreasonable;" or


(4) when the warrant was so facially deficient that it failed to particularize the place to be searched or the things to be seized.



Id. quoting Williams, 3 F.3d at 74 n.4 (citation omitted). In the present case, Kim's does not contend that the affidavit contained deliberately or recklessly false infor- mation  or  that  the  Magistrate  Judge  abandoned  her  ju- dicial role. Instead, Kim's relies on the third and fourth exceptions noted above **14   and maintains that the af- fidavit was so lacking in indicia of probable cause and so lacking in the requisite particularity as to render official belief in the warrant's legality entirely unreasonable. In order to come within these exceptions, Kim's must show, not  just  that  the  Magistrate  Judge  erred  in  issuing  the search warrant at issue,  but that the Magistrate Judge's error was so obvious that a law enforcement officer, with- out legal training, should have realized, upon reading the warrant, that it was invalid and should thus have declined

to execute it.


307 F.3d 137, *146; 2002 U.S. App. LEXIS 19750, **14

Page 5



III. A.


Kim's contends that the affidavit was so lacking in in- dicia  of  probable  cause  that  the  officers  who  executed the  warrant  should  have  realized  that  it  was  invalid. Specifically, Kim's asserts that "although the affidavit to support the search warrant application was detailed with respect to the alleged scheme by the grocery stores and the Chinese restaurants to fraudulently redeem food stamps, it provided almost no information linking those activities to Kim's." Appellant's Brief at 35-35. Kim's also contends that even if the officers could have reasonably thought that the information in the affidavit provided probable **15  cause that Kim's premises once contained evidence of the illegal scheme, any reasonable officer should have real- ized that the information was stale by the time the warrant was issued.


A  magistrate  judge  may  find  probable  cause  when, viewing the totality of the circumstances, "there is a fair probability that . . . evidence of a crime will be found in a particular place." Gates, 462 U.S. at 238. When a warrant is issued and later challenged, a deferential standard of review is applied in determining whether the magistrate judge's probable cause decision was erroneous. The re- viewing court inquires whether there was "a 'substantial basis'  for  finding  probable  cause,"  Hodge,  246  F.3d  at

305 quoting United States v. Jones, 28 V.I. 375, 994 F.2d

1051, 1054 (3d Cir. 1993), as "after-the--fact scrutiny by courts of the sufficiency of an affidavit should not take the form of de novo review." Gates, 462 U.S. at 236. "The resolution of   *147   doubtful or marginal cases in this area should be largely determined by the preference to be  accorded  to  warrants." Jones,  994  F.2d  at  1057-58, quoting United States v. Ventresca, 380 U.S. 102, 109, 13

L. Ed. 2d 684, 85 S. Ct. 741 (1965). **16  B.


We  are  not  persuaded  that  the  affidavit  in  this  case was so deficient in probable cause as to render reliance on  it  unreasonable.  On  the  contrary,  we  view  the  affi- davit as making a substantial showing of probable cause on  which  it  was  objectively  reasonable  for  the  officers to rely. See Hodge,  246 F.3d at 309 citing  Williams,  3

F.3d  at  74.  The  affidavit  provided  great  detail  regard- ing a complex food stamp fraud and money laundering scheme that had been extensively investigated by experi- enced officers. Specifically, the affidavit provided infor- mation that the Wang-Chen Partnership was engaged in a multi-million dollar scheme under which the Partnership purchased food stamps at a discount and redeemed them through " 'bogus' grocery stores." JA at 107. As noted, undercover agents sold food stamps to the Wang-Chen



Partnership,  and  these  stamps  were  later  redeemed  by some of these groceries. The investigation showed that these stores did little legitimate business, but a review of the bank records of five of the stores demonstrated that they had collectively redeemed more than $12,000,000 in food stamps since April 1994. Id. at 108. The proceeds

**17  from the redemption of the food stamps were with- drawn from the grocery stores' bank accounts by check, and all of "the grocery stores. . . made checks payable to a common set of wholesale food companies," including Kim's.  Id.  at  109,  161.  The  amount  of  the  checks  "far exceeded the value of any food inventory that the stores may have purchased." Id. at 109.


The affidavit stated that Kim's received $1,305,302 in payments from these "sham" grocery stores. Id. at 162. These payments could not have been payments for gro- ceries  because,  as  the  affidavit  clearly  sets  forth,  these stores  sold  few  if  any  groceries.  Therefore,  the  simple fact  that  Kim's  cashed  checks  from  grocery  stores  im- plicated  in  the  food  stamp  trafficking  scheme  is  strong evidence that Kim's was also involved in the scheme. It is  therefore  apparent  that  the  affidavit  "was  not  a  'bare bones'  document"  and  that  the  officers'  reliance  on  the search warrant was objectively reasonable. Loy, 191 F.3d at 369.


C.


In arguing that the affidavit in this case was woefully lacking in indicia of probable cause, Kim's places great weight on the following passage in the affidavit:   **18


Wholesale food companies that are engaged in  food  stamp  trafficking  and  money  laun- dering  .  .  .  maintain  records  of  their  legit- imate  business  activity  both  at  their  com- mercial  locations  and  at  private  residences to  which  they  have  access.  These  records include  receipts,  invoices,  lists  of  business associates,  records  of  telephone  numbers, delivery  schedules,  ledgers,  financial  state- ments, cash receipt, disbursement, and sales journals, and correspondence. This informa- tion is relevant because it shows the extent to which the businesses have been engaged in legitimate commerce.



JA at 119 (emphasis added).


Pointing  to  this  passage,  Kim's  argues  that  the  "af- fidavit demonstrate s  that the government was seeking evidence of legitimate business, . . . and  a search war- rant should  only issue when there  is probable cause to believe that .. . evidence of a crime will be found in a


307 F.3d 137, *147; 2002 U.S. App. LEXIS 19750, **18

Page 6



particular place."   *148   Appellant's Brief at 26 (italics in original). This argument is unpersuasive.


As previously stated, the affidavit provided substantial reason to believe that Kim's had received large amounts of money from grocery stores that conducted little or no busi- ness. This information **19    provided probable cause to believe that Kim's ordinary books and records would not contain entries showing legitimate grocery purchases by and deliveries to these sham stores, and the absence of such entries would tend to show that the checks issued by these stores to Kim's were for other than legitimate purposes. We therefore see no problem with this passage in the affidavit, and we hold that there is no ground for suppressing the fruits of the search of Kim's premises due to lack of probable cause.


D.


Kim's next argues that suppression is called for be- cause  the  information  in  the  affidavit  relating  to  Kim's was stale. The search warrant was executed on September

11,  1997,  and  the  affidavit  showed  that  Kim's  began  a relationship  with  the  Wang-Chen  Partnership  in  1994 and  continued  to  engage  in  financial  transactions  with the Partnership through October 25, 1996. JA at 108-09,

162-64. We reject the argument that this 11-month gap rendered the information in the affidavit so clearly stale that reasonable officers could not have believed that the warrant was valid.


Where "an activity is of a protracted and continuous nature,  'the passage of time becomes less significant.' " United States v. Tehfe, 722 F.2d 1114, 1119 (3d Cir. 1983)

**20   quoting United States v. Johnson, 461 F.2d 285,

287 (10th Cir. 1972). Furthermore, where the items to be seized are created for the purpose of preservation, as are business records, the passage of time is also less signifi- cant. See United States v. Williams, 124 F.3d 411, 421 (3d Cir. 1997). In the present case, as noted, the relationship between Kim's and the Partnership was of considerable duration, and the warrant authorized a search for standard categories of business records. Businesses typically retain such records for an extended period of time --  certainly for more than 11 months. For these reasons, we hold that it was objectively reasonable for the executing officers to believe that the evidence supporting the search warrant was not stale. n5


n5 Kim's argued that the District Court improp- erly considered information outside of the affidavit in its ruling that the affidavit supported a finding of probable cause. Because we find that the warrant was executed in good faith,  we need not address this issue.



**21  IV. A.


Kim's  contends  that  the  warrant  in  this  case  was  a

"general warrant" and so plainly lacked the requisite par- ticularity concerning the items to be seized that official reliance on it was unreasonable. The Fourth Amendment provides that "no Warrant shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched,  and the persons or things  to  be  seized."  The  Fourth  Amendment  does  not prohibit  searches  for  long  lists  of  documents  or  other items provided that there is probable cause for each item on the list and that each item is particularly described.


"The       particularity           requirement            'makes     general searches . . . impossible.' " United States v. Christine, 687

F.2d 749, 752 (3d Cir. 1982) quoting Marron v. United States, 275 U.S. 192, 196, 72 L. Ed. 231, 48 S. Ct. 74, Treas. Dec. 42528   *149   (1927); see also, e.g., Stanford v. Texas, 379 U.S. 476, 481, 13 L. Ed. 2d 431, 85 S. Ct.

506,  510  (1965).  A  general  warrant  authorizes  "a  gen- eral,  exploratory rummaging in a person's belongings." Coolidge v. New Hampshire, 403 U.S. 443, 467, 29 L. Ed.

2d 564, 91 S. Ct. 2022 (1971). In order for a warrant to

**22    be invalidated as general,  it must "vest the ex- ecuting officers with unbridled discretion to conduct an exploratory rummaging through defendant's  papers in search of criminal evidence." Christine, 687 F.2d at 753. As we noted in Christine, examples of general warrants are those authorizing searches for and seizures of such vague categories of items as " 'smuggled goods,' " " 'ob- scene  materials,'  "  "  'books,  records,  pamphlets,  cards, receipts, lists, memoranda, pictures, recordings and other written instruments concerning the Communist Party of Texas,' " " 'illegally obtained films,' " and " 'stolen prop- erty.' " Id. (citations omitted).


We have contrasted a "general warrant" with a warrant that is simply overly broad. An overly broad warrant "de- scribe s  in both specific and inclusive generic terms what is to be seized," but it authorizes the seizure of items as to which there is no probable cause. Christine, 687 F.2d at

753-54. An overly broad warrant, however, can be cured by redaction, that is, by "striking from the  warrant those severable phrases and clauses that are invalid for lack of probable cause or generality and preserving those sever- able **23    phrases and clauses that satisfy the Fourth Amendment." Id. at 754. Evidence seized pursuant to an overly broad warrant need not be suppressed if the good faith exception applies.


B.


307 F.3d 137, *149; 2002 U.S. App. LEXIS 19750, **23

Page 7



Contrary to Kim's argument, the warrant here was nei- ther general nor so plainly in violation of the particularity requirement  that  the  executing  officers  could  not  have reasonably trusted in its legality. Although the scope of the warrant was certainly extensive, the warrant was not general. The warrant authorized a search for and seizure of the following :



1) Receipts, invoices, lists of business asso- ciates, delivery schedules, ledgers, financial statements, cash receipts, disbursement, and sales journals, and correspondence.


2) Computers, computer peripherals, related instruction manuals and notes, and software in order to conduct an off-site search for elec- tronic copies of the items listed above.



JA at 179, 181. The warrant thus "described in . . . inclu- sive generic terms what is to be seized." Christine, 687

F.2d  at  753.  It  did  not  vest  the  executing  officers  with

"unbridled discretion" to search for and seize whatever they wished. Id. It was indubitably **24   broad, but it was not "general."


Moreover,  we  think  that  reasonable  officers  could have easily believed that the warrant was not even overly broad with respect to the categories of items to be seized. To be sure, the warrant authorized a search for and the seizure of entire categories of legitimate business records, but it is critical to keep in mind that a principal purpose of the warrant was to prove a negative, viz., that Kim's had not engaged in legitimate business transactions with the sham groceries from which Kim's had received large cash payments.


The  previously  quoted  passage  from  the  affidavit, which Kim's attacks, shows why there was probable cause to seize the categories of business records covered by the warrant. This passage stated:


Wholesale food companies that are engaged in food stamp trafficking and   *150   money laundering . . . maintain records of their le- gitimate business activity both at their com- mercial  locations  and  at  private  residences to  which  they  have  access.  These  records include  receipts,  invoices,  lists  of  business associates,  records  of  telephone  numbers, delivery  schedules,  ledgers,  financial  state- ments, cash receipt, disbursement, and sales journals,   **25   and correspondence. This information is relevant because it shows the



extent to which the businesses have been en- gaged in legitimate commerce.



JA  at  119  (emphasis  added).  In  other  words,  if  Kim's had engaged in legitimate business transactions with the grocery stores in question --  if, for example, it had sold them  groceries  --  its  "receipts,  invoices,  lists  of  busi- ness  associates,  records  of  telephone  numbers,  deliv- ery schedules, ledgers, financial statements, cash receipt, disbursement,  and  sales  journals,  and  correspondence" would have evidenced such transactions. And if evidence of such legitimate transactions was missing from Kim's

"receipts, invoices, lists of business associates, records of telephone numbers, delivery schedules, ledgers, financial statements, cash receipt, disbursement, and sales journals, and correspondence," it was reasonable to infer that no such legitimate transactions had occurred. But in order to show that evidence of such transactions was lacking,  it was necessary to examine all of Kim's "receipts, invoices, lists  of  business  associates,  records  of  telephone  num- bers,  delivery  schedules,  ledgers,  financial  statements, cash  receipt,  disbursement,   **26    and  sales  journals, and correspondence" -- at least for the relevant period of time. Consequently, a reasonable officer could easily have believed that the breadth of the warrant in this case was justified. n6


n6  It  is  also  important  to  keep  in  mind  that the warrant was issued, not only to search for ev- idence of food stamp fraud, but also to search for evidence  of  money  laundering  and  conspiracy  to commit money laundering and that these latter of- fenses include the use of the proceeds of food stamp fraud in a variety of different ways. See 18 U.S.C.

§ 1956 (a)(1). For example, the knowing use of any of the funds (more than $1.3 million) that Kim's received from the sham groceries to further the il- legal scheme or to conceal the origins of the funds might constitute a violation of the money launder- ing  statute.  See  18  U.S.C.  §  1956  (a)  and  (c).  A transaction as seemingly innocent on its face as the purchase of groceries to be supplied to a restaurant in exchange for fraudulently obtained food stamps might qualify, and there was thus probable cause to search for and seize broad categories of records.


**27


The  dissent  contends  that  the  warrant  was  plainly flawed because it was not "limited . . . to documents bear- ing some relation to Kim's transactions with the targeted grocery stores or the individuals known to be participants in the fraud" and because it did not specify "the generic types  of  crimes,  i.e.,  food  stamp  trafficking  or  money


307 F.3d 137, *150; 2002 U.S. App. LEXIS 19750, **27

Page 8



laundering,  to  which  the  items  designated  for  seizure pertained." Dissent at 27. However,  this argument sim- ply overlooks the fact that the investigation in this case sought to prove a negative (that Kim's had not engaged in  legitimate  sales  to  the  sham  groceries).  In  order  to show that no such sales had occurred, it was necessary to search for and seize all of the files in which a record of such transactions would have been kept. Searching for and seizing only those records that positively showed il- licit transactions would not have sufficed. For this reason, it was objectively reasonable for the executing officers in this case to believe that the warrant properly authorized a search for and seizure of the categories of Kim's business records that the warrant set out.


Kim's contends that the warrant violated the partic- ularity  requirement  because  it   **28     did  not  restrict the search and   *151   seizure to documents concerning transactions that occurred during the time period of the illegal food stamp trafficking scheme. In a similar vein, the dissent argues that the warrant, at most, should have covered documents from the period 1994 to 1997 and not for the period 1984 to 1993. Dissent at 26. This argument, however, does not provide a ground for suppressing the evidence supporting the judgment of forfeiture.


The warrant at issue here was tantamount to one au- thorizing a search for records for the years 1984, 1985,

1986, etc. through 1997. If the dissent is correct that the warrant should not have covered documents from 1984 to

1993, that flaw renders the warrant overly broad, not gen- eral. The inclusion of the period from 1984 to 1993 did not "vest the executing officers with unbridled discretion to  conduct  an  exploratory  rummaging  through   defen- dant's  papers in search of criminal evidence." Christine,

687 F.2d at 753. Rather, the inclusion of those years sim- ply authorized a search for documents as to which there may not have been probable cause. Under our decision in Christine,  the proper remedy for this putative defect was **29    simply to excise the years for which there was  no  probable  cause.  At  most,  the  lack  of  time  re- strictions meant that the warrant was overly broad,  not general. Kim's could have, but did not, move for redac- tion of the warrant on this ground. (Redaction is unlikely to  have  helped  Kim's  since  one  would  expect  that  the documents  upon  which  the  government  relied  to  show that bank funds in question were involved in the illegal scheme would fall within the time period of the scheme.) In any event, the absence from the warrant of a provision limiting the search and seizure to documents pertaining to the time period of the scheme did not make the warrant

"so facially deficient" "as to render official belief in its

legality  entirely unreasonable." Hodge, 246 F.3d at 308. Accordingly, the Leon exception to the exclusionary rule precludes suppression of evidence on this ground.




In Massachusetts v. Sheppard, 468 U.S. 981, 82 L. Ed.

2d 737, 104 S. Ct. 3424 (1984), the companion case to Leon, the Supreme Court applied the good faith doctrine to a case in which a warrant had been invalidated because it was overly broad. See also United States v. Kepner, 843

F.2d 755,  763 (3d Cir. 1988). **30    In Sheppard,  the police wished to search the residence of the boyfriend of a murder victim. The supporting affidavit specified that police wanted to search the defendant's residence for " a  fifth bottle of amaretto liquor, 2 nickel bags of marijuana, a woman's jacket that has been described as black-grey

(charcoal), possessions of the victim , similar type wire and rope that match those on the body of the victim , or in the above Thunderbird . A  blunt instrument that might have been used on the victim. Men's or women's clothing that may have blood, gasoline, burns on them. Items that may have fingerprints of the victim." 468 U.S. at

985 (quoting the affidavit). The police sought the warrant on a Sunday and were thus unable to obtain the appro- priate warrant form. The investigating detective found a warrant form used in another county for searches for con- trolled substances and brought the warrant to the judge. After reading the affidavit, the judge agreed to authorize the requested warrant and made necessary changes to the controlled substance warrant form in order to tailor it to the case at hand. However, the judge failed to change the directory portion of the warrant, which **31   authorized a search for "any controlled substance, article, implement or other paraphernalia used in, for, or in connection with the unlawful possession or use of any controlled substance

. . . ." 468 U.S. at 987 n.2   *152   (quoting the warrant form). The warrant was thus overly broad.


The Supreme Court held that the Leon exception to the exclusionary rule applies where executing officers reason- ably believe that a search is authorized by a warrant that is too broad. The Court observed that a police officer is not required to question a judge who has just advised him that the warrant he possesses authorizes him to conduct the re- quested search; as the exclusionary rule was developed to

"deter unlawful searches by police, and  not to punish the errors of magistrates and judges," suppression is inappro- priate. Sheppard, 468 U.S. at 990 quoting Gates, 462 U.S. at 263 (White, J., concurring in judgment).


The  absence  of  limiting  dates  in  the  warrant  in  the present  case  is,  at  worst,  similar  to  the  defect  in  the warrant  in  Sheppard.  The  officers  in  the  present  case conducted a lengthy investigation; they reviewed numer- ous bank transactions;  they painstakingly assembled all

**32    of the information collected during the investi- gation, presented it to a neutral and detached Magistrate Judge, and then revised the affidavit and re-presented it to the Magistrate Judge, who found probable cause to issue a warrant.


307 F.3d 137, *152; 2002 U.S. App. LEXIS 19750, **32

Page 9



The members of the Magistrate Judge corps are highly qualified. They are chosen based on merit by the District Court, and competition for Magistrate Judge positions is keen. Magistrate Judges typically have more experience with issues involving warrants than any other judicial of- ficers. The Magistrate Judge in this case believed that the warrant was proper and thus issued it. When a Magistrate Judge has made such a determination, law enforcement officers, who are rarely attorneys, are entitled to rely on the Magistrate Judge's judgment, except in rare circum- stances, such as where the warrant is so plainly defective in form that even a lay officer could not believe in good faith  that  the  warrant  was  proper.  That  narrow  circum- stance  is  not  present  here,  and  we  therefore  hold  that suppression is not justified.

V. A.


Kim's final argument is that the officers who executed the warrant violated the Fourth Amendment by seizing all documents written in Chinese, **33   regardless of con- tent, without first determining whether the documents fell within one of the categories specified in the warrant that violated the Fourth Amendment. Kim's contends that the government should have been required to send a person who was able to read Chinese to the scene of the search in order to determine whether documents written in Chinese fell within the warrant's scope. Because these arguments raise important Fourth Amendment questions that are not specifically governed by binding precedent, we address the Fourth Amendment issues before turning to the Leon good faith exception. See Leon, 468 U.S. at 925.


B.


The  affidavit  in  this  case  explained  how  the  agents planned to deal with the problem of documents written in Chinese. The affidavit stated:


We anticipate that some of the records on the premises to be searched will be recorded in a  chinese  dialect.  The  government  will  at- tempt to assign an agent who is fluent in at least one chinese dialect to the search teams. It may nonetheless be impossible to screen foreign language documents for relevance on the premises either because they are   *153  in a dialect unknown to our agents or because we are unable **34  to staff the search loca- tion with a chinese speaking agent. We will seize all records that we cannot read. After these records have been reviewed by some- one familiar with the dialect used, all records not described in this search warrant shall be




returned.



JA at 176-77 (emphasis added). According to the gov- ernment's brief, the warrant for the search of Kim's was one of 23 arrest and search warrants that were executed at the same time by approximately 180 federal and state law  enforcement  officials,  approximately  ten  of  whom spoke Chinese. Appellee's Br. at 41 n.3. No officer able to speak Chinese was sent to Kim's. Id. Thus, if the agents who executed the warrant at Kim's proceeded as stated in the affidavit, they seized all documents written in Chinese. The government represents in its brief that all of the seized documents written in Chinese "fell into one of two cat- egories of documents specified by the warrant:  invoices and ledgers," id. at 40-41,  and in view of the scope of the warrant, this may well be true. However, the point is not conceded by Kim's and the record as it now exists ap- parently does not show whether or not the government's representation is true.


C.   **35


The  affidavit  in  this  case  did  not  provide  probable cause for the seizure of all documents  in Chinese,  and the warrant did not authorize the seizure of all such docu- ments. This does not mean, however, that the government was necessarily required to send an agent who was able to  read  Chinese  to  Kim's  to  assist  in  the  execution  of the warrant. "The general touchstone of reasonableness which governs Fourth Amendment analysis . . . governs the method of execution of the warrant," United States v. Ramirez, 523 U.S. 65, 71, 140 L. Ed. 2d 191, 118 S. Ct. 992 (1998) (citation omitted),  and there are plainly circumstances in which it is reasonable to execute a war- rant for documents in a foreign language (or for technical records) without the assistance of an officer who is capable of understanding the materials sought. Reasonableness is determined "by assessing, on the one hand, the degree to which a search or seizure  intrudes upon an individual's privacy and, on the other, the degree to which the search or seizure  is needed for the promotion of legitimate gov- ernmental interests." Wyoming v. Houghton, 526 U.S. 295,

300, 143 L. Ed. 2d 408, 119 S. Ct. 1297 (1999) **36

(citation omitted). If, for example, there is an urgent need to execute a warrant for documents written in a language that relatively few people in the jurisdiction can read, it may be reasonable to proceed without the assistance of someone able to read the language. If officers were obli- gated in such a situation to wait until someone who is able to read the language can be found and assigned to assist with the search, vital evidence could be lost, and as we will explain, there are alternative means of minimizing the intrusion on privacy that immediate execution of the war- rant would produce. Thus, Kim's suggestion that an agent


307 F.3d 137, *153; 2002 U.S. App. LEXIS 19750, **36

Page 10



who is able to read the language must always be assigned to the team executing the warrant is unreasonable.


At the same, we do not embrace the suggestion that ex- ecuting officers may always "seize all records that they  cannot read." If officers who are able to read the language in question are readily available, the failure to assign such an officer to assist in executing the warrant may be unrea- sonable. Furthermore, even if there is a sufficient reason not to assign such a person, the warrant must still be ex- ecuted  in  a  reasonable  manner.  The  privacy  of   **37

*154   those whose Fourth Amendment interests are af- fected by the search should not be infringed to a greater degree than is reasonably necessary to serve the legitimate interests of law enforcement.


One reasonable way of proceeding is outlined in the

Model  Code  of  Pre-Arraignment  Procedure  §  §  220.5

(1975), which recommends that where "documents to be seized cannot be searched for or identified without exam- ining the contents of other documents, . . . the executing officer shall not examine the documents but shall either impound them under appropriate protection where found, or seal and remove them for safekeeping pending further proceedings . . . ." Id. at § 220.5(2). Promptly following the removal or impoundment of the documents, an exe- cuting officer should "report the fact and circumstances of the impounding or removal to the issuing official. As soon thereafter as the interests of justice permit, and upon due and reasonable notice to all interested persons, a hearing shall be held before the issuing official . . . at which the person from whose possession or control the documents were taken . . . may appear . . . and move (a) for the return of the documents . . . in whole or in part,   **38   or (b) for specification of such conditions and limitations on the further search for documents to be seized as may be ap- propriate to prevent unnecessary or unreasonable invasion of privacy." Id. at § 220.5(3). This adversary hearing en- ables the moving party to request that certain procedures be used to "prevent excessive invasions of privacy." Note to Model Code of Pre-Arraignment Procedure § 220.5; see also United States v. Tamura, 694 F.2d 591, 595-97

(9th Cir. 1982). These procedures may include conducting the search in the presence of counsel, allowing the mov- ing party to demonstrate that certain files or portions of intermingled documents could not possibly fall within the scope of the search warrant, or requiring that the search be conducted by a special master. See id.


D.


In the present case, the record is insufficient to deter- mine whether the Fourth Amendment was violated as a result of the seizure of documents in Chinese. Although the government's brief makes representations relating to the need to execute the warrant at Kim's without assigning



an officer able to read Chinese, it does not appear that the present record supports those representations. Moreover,

**39   it does not appear that the record reveals whether any documents that did not fall within the scope of the warrant  were  taken  from  Kim's.  If  no  such  documents were  taken,  then  there  was  no  violation  of  the  Fourth Amendment. If such documents were taken and retained, there may or may not have been a violation. n7 And if there was a violation, there may or may not be grounds for reversing the judgment of forfeiture.


n7 There might not be a violation if a cursory ex- amination of such documents to determine whether they fell within the scope of the warrant revealed that they evidenced criminal activity. Of course, the handling of the documents up to the point of ex- amination would also have to comply with Fourth Amendment requirements.



Because of these gaps in the record, we believe that it is advisable to vacate the judgment of forfeiture and remand to the District Court for further proceedings. On remand, Kim's should identify any documents that were taken in the search and do not fall within any of the cate- gories **40   of documents set out in the warrant. If any such documents are identified, the government should be given the opportunity to establish either that the seizure of these documents was permitted by the Fourth   *155  Amendment or that the Leon exception to the exclusion- ary rule precludes suppression. n8


n8 We express no view on the question whether the  good  faith  exception  would  apply  here  if  a Fourth Amendment violation is found.



VI.


For  the  reasons  explained  above,  we  reject  Kim's arguments  relating  to  probable  cause  and  particularity. However, because of gaps in the present record relating to the seizure of documents written in Chinese,  we va- cate the judgment of forfeiture and remand to the District Court for further proceedings concerning this issue only.


DISSENTBY: AMBRO


DISSENT: AMBRO, Circuit Judge, dissenting:


The Kim's warrant was so lacking in particularity that no reasonably well-trained officer could execute it in good faith. Thus, I respectfully dissent. n1


n1 I agree with the majority that the record is in- adequate to resolve Kim's argument with respect to


307 F.3d 137, *155; 2002 U.S. App. LEXIS 19750, **40

Page 11



the seizure of documents written in Chinese. In my opinion, however, that issue would not be reached, as all the evidence taken from Kim's should be sup- pressed due to the constitutionally defective war- rant in this case.


**41


The Fourth Amendment requires that a warrant de- scribe with particularity the place to be searched and the things to be seized. Coolidge v. New Hampshire, 403 U.S.

443,  467,  29 L. Ed. 2d 564,  91 S. Ct. 2022 (1971). To pass  constitutional  muster,  specificity  "as  to  what  is  to be taken" is necessary so that "nothing is left to the dis- cretion of the officer executing the warrant." Marron v. United States,  275 U.S. 192,  196,  72 L. Ed. 231,  48 S. Ct. 74 (1927). Moreover, when a warrant is "so facially deficient--i.e., in failing to particularize the place to be searched or the things to be seized--that the executing of- ficer cannot reasonably presume it to be valid," the good faith exception to the exclusionary rule is inapplicable. United States v. Leon, 468 U.S. 897, 923, 82 L. Ed. 2d

677, 104 S. Ct. 3405 (1984).


I. The Kim's warrant lacked constitutionally required specificity.


The Kim's warrant was so inexact that the executing officers could not have reasonably presumed its validity. It allowed the seizure of the following items:


Receipts,  invoices,  lists  of  business  asso- ciates, delivery schedules, ledgers, financial statements,  cash   **42    receipt,  disburse- ment,  and  sales  journals,  and  correspon- dence.


Computer, computer peripherals, related in- struction manuals and notes, and software in order to conduct an off-site search for elec- tronic copies of the items listed above.



This  warrant  vested  the  executing  officers  with  carte blanche to seize all documents --  even those written in Chinese --  regardless whether the agents knew what the documents were or how they related to the investigation. By doing so, the Government ignored its burden of draft- ing the Kim's warrant as specific as possible based on the information  available  at  the  time  of  the  search.  United States v. American Investors of Pittsburgh, Inc., 879 F.2d

1087, 1106 (3d Cir. 1989). Here, that limiting informa- tion would have included Kim's alleged time period of involvement and criminal activity. n2



n2 Based on the information contained in its af- fidavit, the Government also could have limited the search and seizure to documents bearing some rela- tion to Kim's transactions with the targeted grocery stores or the individuals known to be participants in the fraud.


**43     *156


A.  The  warrant  should  have  been  limited  to  Kim's alleged dates of involvement.


As noted by the majority, the warrant did not qualify its generic list of business records by providing a descrip- tion of the relevant time period under investigation. While the allegations pertaining to Kim's took place exclusively in  1996,  and  while  those  that  pertained  to  the  partner- ship  at  large  occurred  from  1994  to  1997,  the  warrant bestowed license to forage through any records found at Kim's, even those dating from its opening in 1983 through

1994, a period during which there is no suggestion on the record before us that Kim's conducted anything but le- gitimate business. By itself, this deficiency resulted in an unconstitutionally broad warrant. United States v. Ford,

184 F.3d 566, 576 (6th Cir. 1999) ("Failure to limit broad descriptive terms by relevant dates, when such dates are available to the police, will render a warrant overbroad."). In defending this omission, the majority asserts that

"at  most,  the  lack  of  time  restrictions  meant  that  the warrant was overly broad, not general." Maj. Op. at 18. Controlling case law suggests otherwise. A general war- rant  is  one  authorizing  "a   **44    general  exploratory rummaging in a person's belongings." Coolidge, 403 U.S. at 467. For example, Stanford v. Texas, 379 U.S. 476, 13 L. Ed. 2d 431, 85 S. Ct. 506 (1965), involved a general war- rant. There, the warrant authorized the seizure of "books, records, pamphlets, cards, receipts, lists, memoranda, pic- tures, recordings and other written instruments concern- ing the Communist Party of Texas." Id. at 486. The war- rant here--which contained no limitations as to the time period, transactions, activities, or crimes involved--is not even as specific as that in Stanford, which was found to be unconstitutionally general.


B.  The  warrant  should  have  been  limited  to  Kim's alleged criminal activity.


Further, the warrant could have specified the generic types  of  crimes,  i.e.,  food  stamp  trafficking  or  money laundering, to which the items designated for seizure per- tained. United States v. George, 975 F.2d 72, 77 (2d Cir.

1992) (refusing to apply the Leon good faith exception because "a warrant not limited in scope to any crime at all is so unconstitutionally broad that no reasonably well- trained police officer could believe otherwise") (emphasis


307 F.3d 137, *156; 2002 U.S. App. LEXIS 19750, **45

Page 12



**45   in original). This defect is fatal, and distinguishes this case from United States v. Conley, 4 F.3d 1200 (3d Cir. 1993), which the Government cites for the proposi- tion that the warrant was not facially deficient. In Conley, our  Court  reviewed  a  decision  of  the  District  Court  to suppress  based  on  its  finding  that  a  search  warrant  for the premises of a business which leased poker machines failed to establish probable cause. On appeal, defendants maintained that the warrant at issue was overbroad be- cause it authorized the seizure of



all video poker machines, keys for machines, accounting records, all revenue records, em- ployee records, purchase orders from distrib- utors and manufactors sic  of video poker machines,  all  records  showing  poker  ma- chine locations and any and all paraphernalia indicative of a gambling operation.



4 F.3d at 1204. Our Court rejected the argument, finding that the warrant satisfied the particularity requirement of the Fourth Amendment because it fairly limited the search to items related to the illegal gambling operation under suspicion. Id. at 1208.


In  contrast,  the  Kim's  warrant  did  not  so  much  as

**46    allude to the illegal activity under investigation. An agent reviewing   *157   and implementing the war- rant  on  Kim's  would  have  no  basis  to  distinguish  be- tween business records and receipts relating to suspected illegal conduct and those that were altogether irrelevant and innocuous. The Kim's warrant did not meaningfully limit the intrusion into personal privacy because it failed to  direct  the  officers  to  seize  only  items  probative  of crimes, here money laundering and/or food stamp fraud. Cf. United States v. McClintock,  748 F.2d 1278,  1282-

83 (9th Cir. 1984) (approving warrant containing the lan- guage "any and all items referring to the sale of diamonds and other gemstones which are evidence of a violation of Title XVIII"); United States v. Dennis, 625 F.2d 782,

792  (8th  Cir.  1980)  (upholding  a  warrant  which  called for  seizure  of  "certain  books  and  records  (or  items  of evidence)  relating  to  the  extortionate  credit  transaction business"); Grimaldi v. United States, 606 F.2d 332, 337,

339 (1st Cir. 1979) (holding that the phrase "parapherna- lia used in the manufacture of counterfeit federal reserve notes" was an adequate means of limiting the warrant).

**47


The majority justifies the Government's failure to in- clude a phrase limiting the warrant to the alleged criminal activity because "the investigation in this case sought to prove a negative (that Kim's had not engaged in legitimate



sales to the sham groceries)." Maj. Op. at 17 (emphasis in original). This position essentially endorses a fishing expedition where the Government is allowed to seek evi- dence of legitimate, not illegitimate, conduct. n3 Further, this "negative" proof argument contradicts the Supreme Court's  dictate  that  before  a  search  warrant  may  issue, the magistrate judge must be satisfied that "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, 76 L. Ed. 2d 527, 103 S. Ct. 2317 (1983) (em- phasis  added).  Contrary  to  the  majority's  assertion,  the Government can obtain a warrant only for evidence sug- gesting illegal conduct, not for evidence, or a dearth of evidence, suggesting legal conduct.


n3 Ironically, the majority contradicts its own

"negative" proof argument by also stating that the Government seized the documents to prove a posi- tive, i.e., as actual direct evidence of a money laun- dering scheme. Maj. Op. at 16 n.6.


**48


The majority exacerbates this misapprehension of law by stating that "in order to show that evidence of such transactions  was  lacking,  it  was  necessary  to  examine all  of  Kim's  'receipts,  invoices,  lists  of  business  asso- ciates, records of telephone numbers, delivery schedules, ledgers, financial statements, cash receipt, disbursement, and sales journals and correspondence.' " Maj. Op. at 16

(emphasis in original). This argument essentially suggests that Kim's was "permeated with fraud," or was so exten- sively involved in the scheme that it affected every level of its organization. Rickert v. Sweeney, 813 F.2d 907, 909

(8th Cir. 1987).


However,  the  Government's  own  brief  and  affidavit undermine the majority's analysis. A business does not qualify  as  "permeated  with  fraud"  if  it  is  an  actual  le- gitimate business which is merely involved in a partic- ular criminal activity for a finite period of time. United States  v.  Kow,  58  F.3d  423,  428  (9th  Cir.  1995).  Here, the Government itself acknowledges that Kim's was first established in 1983, over ten years prior to the business' first alleged involvement in the scheme, and that during

1995 and 1996 Kim's received only **49    13% of its total revenue from the alleged scheme. Government's Br. at 24. By all accounts, Kim's was a legitimate business even when it was participating in the scheme. More im- portantly,  there  is  no   *158    evidence  of  its  criminal involvement during the first twelve years of its existence. Under these circumstances, Kim's does not qualify as an entity "permeated with fraud," and thus, the majority errs by justifying a wholesale seizure of all business records.


307 F.3d 137, *158; 2002 U.S. App. LEXIS 19750, **49

Page 13



II. The Government took no steps to limit the scope of the search and seizure.


In addition to its inadequate drafting, the Government failed to undertake subsequent measures to limit the scope of the search and seizure. The affidavit was not incorpo- rated  into  or  attached  to  the  warrant,  and  therefore  the affidavit cannot serve as a source of additional specificity. See United States v. Johnson,  690 F.2d 60,  64 (3d Cir.

1982) (holding that where an affidavit is incorporated by reference into the warrant, the affidavit can cure the war- rant's lack of particularity).


Further, Agents Thomerson and McElravy, the offi- cers who swore out the affidavit, failed to supervise the Kim's  search  and  seizure.  Their  inaction  distinguishes

**50   this case from United States v. Kepner, 843 F.2d

755  (3d  Cir.  1988),  which  the  majority  cites  for  sup- port  without  actual  discussion.  In  Kepner  we  upheld  a warrant that authorized the search and seizure of "docu- ments, records, and personal effects" of Thomas Kepner, a union official who was the subject of a continuing in- vestigation into labor racketeering. The application and accompanying affidavit used more specialized language than the warrant, alleging probable cause to believe that a search of the condominium would yield "clothing, docu- ments, records, diaries, and correspondence that establish

Kepner's  use and control of the condominium unit as well as his illegal receipt of prohibited benefits." Id. at

762 (alteration in original). Even though the search team in Kepner did not have a copy of the affidavit handy, the lead agent who drew up the affidavit carefully instructed his team as to the scope of the search and "took respon- sibility  for  determining  whether  every  piece  of  seized evidence fell within the scope of the warrant." Id. at 763-

64. Comparable diligence was not exercised here. Similarly, the majority places considerable emphasis

**51  on Massachusetts v. Sheppard, 468 U.S. 981, 82 L. Ed. 2d 737, 104 S. Ct. 3424 (1984), in which the Supreme Court allowed the good faith exception to proceed where a warrant was invalidated by a state appellate court for fail- ing to describe the "things to be seized." Though the war- rant in Sheppard authorized an expansive search without specific description of the items to be seized, the detective who prepared the affidavit and secured the warrant made every effort to correct inaccuracies in the form warrant, personally supervised the search of Sheppard's residence, and brought along a copy of the affidavit to the search. Id. at 985-89. In other words, the critical factor motivat- ing the Supreme Court to disregard the judge's clerical oversight was the fact that the officers "took every step that could reasonably be expected of them." Id. at 989. In contrast, the officers here took no steps to limit the search and seizure of Kim's business records.




More comparable is United States v. Leary, 846 F.2d

592 (10th Cir. 1988), where the Tenth Circuit affirmed a suppression order on the grounds that the warrant was so facially overbroad as **52    to negate any claim of good faith. The warrant in Leary, predicated on probable cause to believe that the defendant had engaged in an ille- gal export transaction, authorized the search of an export company for



correspondence,  Telex messages,  contracts, invoices, purchase orders, shipping   *159  documents,  payment  records,  export  doc- uments,  packing   slips,      technical   data, recorded  notations,  and  other  records  and communications  relating  to  the  purchase, sale  and  illegal  exportation  of  materials  in violation of the Arms Export Control Act, 22

U.S.C. 2778, and the Export Administration

Act of 1979, 50 U.S.C. App. 2410.



846 F.2d at 594. The search generated twenty boxes of business records, most unrelated to the investigation. See id.  at  594-95.  The  Court  held  that  the  warrant,  which

"encompassed virtually every document that one might expect to find in a modern export company's office," was facially deficient in light of the fact that the Government had in its possession information that it could have used to limit more precisely the description of the documents to be seized. Id. at 600-02. **53


As in Leary, information was readily available to the Government in this case to make the warrant's descrip- tion of the records to be seized substantially more spe- cific. Instead, the Government rejected more precise lan- guage, and the sweeping results speak for themselves: the Government confiscated thirty-six boxes of documents, a filing cabinet, two computers, twelve plastic bags con- taining brown paper bags, and U.S. currency.

III. Suppression is the only appropriate remedy. Finally, the majority misapplies the redaction remedy

endorsed in United States v. Christine, 687 F.2d 749, 759

(3d Cir. 1982). While conceding that the warrant should have included time restrictions,  the majority states that Christine's redaction concept may cure this defect by au- thorizing a reviewing court to insert the relevant dates into the Kim's warrant. This reasoning stretches Christine to the majority's Procrustean bed by endorsing the rewriting, not the redacting, of this unconstitutional warrant. But as Christine makes clear, redaction does not include insert- ing new terms into a warrant. Instead, "by redaction, we mean striking from a warrant those severable phrases and


307 F.3d 137, *159; 2002 U.S. App. LEXIS 19750, **53

Page 14



clauses that are **54   invalid for lack of probable cause or generality and preserving those severable phrases and clauses that satisfy the Fourth Amendment." Id. at 754

(emphases  added).  This  definition  does  not  include  re- drafting a document to add time or criminal activity lim- itations, especially when, as here, the warrant contained no such "phrases and clauses" in the first place.


"Redaction is inappropriate when the valid portions of the warrant may not be meaningfully severable from the  warrant  as  a  whole."  Id.  When,  as  with  the  Kim's warrant, "no portion of the warrant is sufficiently partic- ularized to pass constitutional muster, then total suppres- sion  is  required."  Kow,  58  F.3d  at  427-28  (refusing  to allow redaction or apply the good faith exception when the Government "did not limit the scope of the seizure to a time frame within which the suspected criminal ac- tivity took place" and failed "to describe . . . the specific criminal activity suspected."); see Christine, 687 F.2d at

758 ("It is beyond doubt that all evidence seized pursuant to a general warrant must be suppressed."). Similar to the warrant in Kow, no portion of the Kim's warrant is limited by reference **55   to dates or criminal activity. In this situation, redaction is not only inappropriate, it is wholly




unfeasible.


IV. Conclusion


Any  number  of  measures--limiting  the  warrant  by relevant time period, transactions, or criminal activities, incorporating or attaching the affidavit,  supervising the search  to  limit  the  officers'  discretion--could  arguably have allowed this warrant   *160    to survive constitu- tional  scrutiny.  The  Government  chose  instead  to  draft a general warrant the Fourth Amendment explicitly for- bids. Further, "when the Supreme Court announced the good faith exception in Leon, it weakened the exclusion- ary  rule,  but  it  did  not  eviscerate  it.  Good  faith  is  not a  magic  lamp  for  police  officers  to  rub  whenever  they find themselves in trouble." United States v. Zimmerman,

277 F.3d 426, 437-38 (3d Cir. 2002). Sensing that it was indeed in trouble,  the Government conceded at oral ar- gument that the Kim's warrant "could have been written better, and should have been written better." This admis- sion is an understatement of unconstitutional proportion. To sanction it nonetheless lets Leon's good faith excep- tion swallow the Fourth Amendment's rule. I respectfully dissent.   **56


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