U.S. v. Brinkley
Decision Date | 17 July 1980 |
Docket Number | No. 80-1099,80-1099 |
Citation | 623 F.2d 533 |
Parties | UNITED STATES of America, Appellee, v. Lorenzo BRINKLEY, Appellant. |
Court | U.S. Court of Appeals — Eighth Circuit |
Richard H. Sindel, Sindel, Sindel & Sindel, Clayton, Mo., for appellant.
Richard L. Poehling, Asst. U. S. Atty., St. Louis, Mo. (argued), and Robert D. Kingsland, U. S. Atty., St. Louis, Mo., on brief, for appellee.
Before BRIGHT, HENLEY, and McMILLIAN, Circuit Judges.
A federal jury in Missouri found Lorenzo Brinkley guilty of possession of a controlled substance (cocaine) with intent to distribute, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1) (1976). 1 The district court entered a judgment of conviction upon the jury verdict. 2 On appeal Brinkley contends that the district court erred in denying his pretrial motion to suppress evidence gathered pursuant to an allegedly invalid search warrant and in admitting at trial as exhibits items gathered in the search. 3 We reject these contentions and affirm.
At trial the evidence disclosed that from August through October 1979, members of the narcotics section of the St. Louis Police Department intelligence unit conducted an investigation of Brinkley. On October 16, 1979, they obtained a search warrant for an apartment in St. Louis, Missouri, from Missouri Circuit Judge Thomas McGuire. The following morning St. Louis Police Department detectives executed the search warrant in the company of Drug Enforcement Administration Special Agent Walter Miller.
The officers found Brinkley asleep in a bedroom on the apartment's second floor. Their search of that bedroom revealed two bags of cocaine, 4 one on the night table next to Brinkley's bed and a larger one under the mattress on which he had been sleeping. Elsewhere in the apartment they found and seized various items identified by Special Agent Miller as narcotics paraphernalia. The officers then placed Brinkley under arrest. Brinkley's defense at trial was that the cocaine did not belong to him and that he did not have dominion or control of the premises in which it was found. 5
Brinkley first contends that the affidavits on which Missouri Circuit Judge McGuire issued the search warrant fail the two-prong test of probable cause established in Aguilar v. Texas, 378 U.S. 108, 84 S.Ct. 1509, 12 L.Ed.2d 723 (1964), and that the district court should therefore have suppressed the items seized pursuant to the warrant. We disagree. The affidavits submitted to Judge McGuire by two St. Louis Police Department detectives establish the underlying circumstances of both the informant's belief that narcotics were in the apartment and the officers' belief in the informant's reliability. The affidavits disclose that the officers' informant supplied the information concerning the whereabouts of the narcotics on the basis of personal observation and that the informant had in the past supplied reliable information to the officers. Because the affidavits establish the basis for both the information supplied by the informant and the officers' belief in the informant's reliability, the district court correctly determined that the affidavits made out probable cause for the issuance of the search warrant. See id. at 114-15, 84 S.Ct. at 1514; United States v. Fleming, 566 F.2d 623, 625 (8th Cir. 1977).
Brinkley finally contends that the district court erred in admitting into evidence those items obtained by police in executing the search warrant. The gist of Brinkley's argument seems to be that the district court abused its discretion in admitting the seized items because the Government proved only an attenuated connection between Brinkley and the items.
The argument lacks merit. The undisputed evidence disclosed that officers seized two bags of cocaine from a bedroom in which Brinkley slept and various narcotics paraphernalia from elsewhere in the...
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...knowledge and that the informant had in the past supplied accurate information to the police. See, e. g., United States v. Brinkley, 623 F.2d 533, 534 (8th Cir. 1980) (per curiam); United States v. Fleming, 566 F.2d 623, 625 (8th Cir. 1977); United States v. Gavic, 520 F.2d 1346, 1350-51 (8......
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State v. Corley, 41406
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