       This opinion is subject to revision before publication


        UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                  FOR THE    ARMED FORCES
                         _______________

                       UNITED STATES
                          Appellant
                                v.
          Jason M. BLACKBURN, Staff Sergeant
              United States Air Force, Appellee
                          No. 20-0071
                      Crim. App. No. 39397
               Argued June 3, 2020—July 24, 2020
           Military Judge: Christopher M. Schumann
   For Appellant: Captain Peter F. Kellett (argued); Colonel
   Shaun S. Speranza, Lieutenant Colonel Brian C. Mason,
   and Mary Ellen Payne, Esq. (on brief).
   For Appellee: Major Meghan R. Glines-Barney (argued).
   Judge RYAN delivered the opinion of the Court, in
   which Chief Judge STUCKY, and Judges OHLSON and
   SPARKS, joined. Judge MAGGS filed a separate opinion
   concurring in the judgment.
                       _______________


   Judge RYAN delivered the opinion of the Court.
    A general court-martial convicted Appellee, contrary to
his pleas, of one charge and specification of sexual abuse of a
child and one charge and specification of indecent recording
in violation of Articles 120b and 120c, Uniform Code of Mili-
tary Justice (UCMJ), 10 U.S.C. §§ 920b, 920c (2012). The
panel sentenced Appellee to a bad-conduct discharge, con-
finement for five years, forfeiture of all pay and allowances,
and reduction to E-1. The convening authority approved all
but the adjudged forfeitures, deferring the mandatory forfei-
ture of pay in the amount of $728.00 until the date of action
and waiving the mandatory forfeiture of pay and allowances
for six months, release from confinement, or expiration of
term of service, whichever was sooner.
   The United States Air Force Court of Criminal Appeals
(AFCCA) affirmed one charge and specification of sexual
abuse of a child but set aside one charge and specification of
          United States v. Blackburn, No. 20-0071/AF
                     Opinion of the Court

indecent recording and the sentence and authorized a re-
hearing. United States v. Blackburn, No. ACM 39397, 2019
CCA LEXIS 336, at *54, 2019 WL 3980730, at *18 (A.F. Ct.
Crim. App. Aug. 22, 2019).
    The Judge Advocate General of the Air Force then certi-
fied the following issues pursuant to Article 67(a)(2), UCMJ,
10 U.S.C. § 867(a)(2) (2018):
      I. Whether under Military Rule of Evidence
         311(d)(2)(A), Appellee waived a basis for sup-
         pression that he did not raise at trial?
      II. Whether the Air Force Court of Criminal Ap-
          peals erred in finding the military judge abused
          his discretion when he denied the motion to
          suppress digital evidence pursuant to the good
          faith exception?
      III. Whether the military judge properly denied the
           motion to suppress digital evidence pursuant to
           Military Rule of Evidence 311(a)(3), a determi-
           nation not reviewed by the Air Force Court of
           Criminal Appeals?
The first question we answer in the negative. Answering the
second question in the affirmative, we need not reach the
third issue. We therefore remand to the AFCCA for further
review under Article 66, UCMJ, 10 U.S.C. § 866 (2018).

                       I. Background

    On April 20, 2016, while undressing to shower, Appel-
lee’s twelve-year-old stepdaughter, ES, found a camcorder in
the bathroom. The camcorder was partially covered, but the
lens was exposed, aimed at the shower, and a red light indi-
cated the device was recording. On the device, she found an
eleven-minute video of her in the bathroom, as well as an-
other video she could not access. Appellee entered the bath-
room, saw ES reviewing the video, apologized, and claimed it
was a prank. ES then told her stepmother, LS, and her fa-
ther, JS, that she found Appellee’s camcorder recording her
in the bathroom, and LS contacted the Air Force Office of
Special Investigations (AFOSI).
    AFOSI immediately responded with “an all hands on
deck” mentality and assembled an investigative team that
included then special agent Technical Sergeant D (TSgt D).


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          United States v. Blackburn, No. 20-0071/AF
                     Opinion of the Court

After speaking with LS, security forces apprehended Appel-
lee due to the risk that evidence might be tampered with or
destroyed.
    AFOSI then interviewed ES, and TSgt D listened in. She
said Appellee often came into the bathroom while she show-
ered, but only on nights when her biological mother MB,
Appellee’s wife, was not home. On one such occasion, Appel-
lee aimed a camera over the curtain rod but later claimed he
was only joking. He showed the camera to ES afterward and
said it was not recording. Appellee had previously asked ES
to send him pictures of her in a recently purchased shirt,
and she complied. He also once asked ES for nude pictures
before deploying, but ES declined.
    AFOSI interviewed MB, LS, and JS. MB said Appellee
was “tech savvy” and had multiple computers in their home
that they used regularly. LS said ES told her Appellee slept
in her bed at least once and frequently texted her asking for
pictures of herself and if she was alone. No one stated that
Appellee backed up media to his computers or connected his
camcorder to any of his devices.
    In accordance with AFOSI practices, TSgt D then briefed
the military magistrate over the phone, with a judge advo-
cate on the line, regarding the case. TSgt D later prepared a
written affidavit reflecting the conversation and submitted it
within the required time frame.1 The affidavit closed with
“[b]ased on my experience, training and the facts listed
above, I believe evidence proving [Appellee]’s intent to man-
ufacture child pornography is located within his residence.”
TSgt D requested and received authorization to search and
seize “any and all cameras or electronic media to include
hard drives, SD cards, compact discs, computers and tablet
computers that could contain evidence of child pornography
within [Appellee]’s residence.” Upon executing the search
authorization, AFOSI seized approximately 300 items, in-
cluding Appellee’s computer. A search of this computer
found “several videos of [ES] in the bathroom.”


   1 The written search authorization was approved by the mili-
tary magistrate on April 23, 2016.




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          United States v. Blackburn, No. 20-0071/AF
                     Opinion of the Court

    Appellee moved to suppress evidence obtained pursuant
to the search authorization, “particularly videos found on a
personal desktop computer.” Relying heavily on United
States v. Nieto, 76 M.J. 101 (C.A.A.F. 2017), he argued that
the search authorization was neither supported by probable
cause nor covered by the good faith exception, as the affida-
vit failed to show a “particularized nexus” between the cam-
corder and the other electronics.
    In the written motion to suppress, Appellee highlighted
that when the search authorization was requested, “there
was no showing [that Appellee] actually downloaded images
from the camcorder to his computer . . . . In fact, the affida-
vit did not even mention the existence of a computer. In this
sense, the affidavit clearly lacked sufficient information to
tie the camcorder to the other seized electronics.” Further-
more, the “agents knew they had no evidence connecting
[Appellee]’s camcorder to his computer, yet they sought a
search authorization for it anyway.”
    TSgt D testified at the suppression hearing that he re-
quested authorization to search and seize electronics other
than the camcorder because people typically transfer cam-
corder footage to other devices, but he did not recall relaying
this specific point to the magistrate. The magistrate testified
that she thought inclusion of the other devices was warrant-
ed because there were multiple instances of Appellee asking
ES for pictures and recording ES in the bathroom. She found
these occurrences evidenced a possible pattern of behavior
that, when coupled with the commonsense understanding
that people tend to transfer camcorder videos onto other de-
vices for subsequent viewing, warranted a broader scope of
authorization. She “absolutely” felt that Appellee may have
backed up some of his media. The magistrate could not re-
call whether, on the phone, TSgt D said Appellee ever con-
nected the camcorder to another device, possessed child por-
nography, or visited such websites.
   Appellee countered with Nieto, arguing that a showing
was needed “linking the computer to the instrumentality of
the crime,” and “that particularized nexus is missing here
because the . . . camcorder[] had no connection to the com-
puter that [AF]OSI or the magistrate knew about at the
time that she granted the search authorization.” TSgt D did


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          United States v. Blackburn, No. 20-0071/AF
                     Opinion of the Court

not brief the magistrate on the camcorder’s specifications,
nor did he know if the files on the device were transferrable
to a computer. Further, there was no evidence Appellee pro-
duced or disseminated child pornography, nor did TSgt D
tell the magistrate he believed that there was child pornog-
raphy on Appellee’s computer.
   The military judge denied the motion to suppress. Ac-
knowledging his decision was a “very close call,” he agreed
that the search authorization lacked probable cause under
Nieto but found the good faith exception applied.
   The military judge found none of the four bars to the
good faith exception under United States v. Leon, 468 U.S.
897, 923 (1984), applied, stating, as relevant here, that the
magistrate was not misled by the affidavit nor did TSgt D
give false information or recklessly disregard the truth.
    The military judge then found each element of the excep-
tion satisfied. First, the magistrate was competent. Second,
the agents would be objectively reasonable in believing the
magistrate had a “substantial basis” for probable cause: The
search request “was not a ‘bare bones’ affidavit,” TSgt D did
not “intentionally or recklessly omit[] or misstate[] any in-
formation,” and the magistrate had a “common sense belief
and understanding regarding the likelihood of an individual
transferring data from a camcorder to another media device
when she approved the request for a search authorization.”
Third, the magistrate did not rubber-stamp the request; she
testified that her conversation with TSgt D was consistent
with the contents of the written affidavit and a judge advo-
cate participated in the discussion.
    On appeal, the AFCCA agreed that the absence of a nex-
us between the camcorder and other electronic devices fore-
closed a finding of probable cause. 2019 CCA LEXIS 336, at
*43–44, 2019 WL 3980730, at *15.
    However, the AFCCA found that the military judge erred
in applying the good faith exception to the exclusionary rule
and thus abused his discretion in denying the motion to
dismiss. 2019 CCA LEXIS 336, at *43–44, 2019 WL
3980730, at *15. The Court disagreed that “TSgt D[] did not
recklessly omit or misstate any information” because “[n]one
of the information available to the AFOSI agents supported


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           United States v. Blackburn, No. 20-0071/AF
                      Opinion of the Court

a conclusion that the images captured on the camcorder de-
picted ES naked.” 2019 CCA LEXIS 336, at *46, 2019 WL
3980730, at *16. Furthermore, “the search authorization in
this case was premised on the search for child pornography”
but Appellee’s charge was for indecent recording, which does
not require sexually explicit images. 2019 CCA LEXIS 336,
at *47, 2019 WL 3980730, at *16. The AFCCA further noted
that “[i]njecting a reference to child pornography into the
request for search authorization at best skewed the facts
that were known at the time, and at worst amounted to a
reckless misstatement of those facts.” 2019 CCA LEXIS 336,
at *47, 2019 WL 3980730, at *16. The compilation of this
conduct, according to the AFCCA, amounted to “recklessly
omitting or misstating the information to obtain the author-
ization,” which foreclosed the application of the good faith
exception. 2019 CCA LEXIS 336, at *50, 2019 WL 3980730,
at *17.
                          II. Discussion
                           A. Waiver
    The Government first argues the lower court erred by re-
versing the military judge’s denial of the motion to suppress
on a ground not preserved by Appellee: TSgt D recklessly
omitted or misstated information to obtain the authoriza-
tion. While a close call, we find no waiver here.
    This Court reviews de novo whether an accused has
waived an issue. United States v. Ahern, 76 M.J. 194, 197
(C.A.A.F. 2017). Suppression arguments not raised at trial
are waived under Military Rule of Evidence (M.R.E.)
311(d)(2)(A). See United States v. Perkins, 78 M.J. 381, 389–
90 (C.A.A.F. 2019). Preservation requires a “particularized
objection.” Id. at 390 (internal quotation marks omitted) (ci-
tation omitted).2 When constitutional rights are at issue, we
have applied a presumption against finding waiver. United
States v. Jones, 78 M.J. 37, 44 (C.A.A.F. 2018). In Perkins,
we found that the appellant waived the argument that the

   2  This requirement ensures the government has the opportuni-
ty to present relevant evidence and develop a full record for review
on appeal. 78 M.J. at 390 (citing United States v. Stringer, 37 M.J.
120, 132 (C.M.A. 1993) (Wiss, J., concurring in the result)).




                                 6
           United States v. Blackburn, No. 20-0071/AF
                      Opinion of the Court

evidence must be suppressed3 because the issuing authority
rubber-stamped the request, where the argument at trial
was that “the search authorization was unconstitutionally
vague, was lacking in probable cause, and failed to meet the
particularity requirement of the Fourth Amendment.” 78
M.J. at 389–90 (internal quotation marks omitted) (citation
omitted). This fell far short of the “particularized objection”
required to preserve the “rubber-stamp” issue. Id. (internal
quotation marks omitted) (citations omitted).
    The situation is more nuanced here. The good faith ex-
ception is unavailable when the magistrate “was misled by
information in an affidavit that the affiant knew was false or
would have known was false except for his reckless disre-
gard of the truth.” Leon, 468 U.S. at 923 (citing Franks v.
Delaware, 438 U.S. 154 (1978)). Though definitions of “reck-
less disregard” in this context range from sheltering “obvi-
ous reasons to doubt the veracity of the allegations,” United
States v. Cowgill, 68 M.J. 388, 392 (C.A.A.F. 2010) (internal
quotation marks omitted) (quoting United States v. Jones,
208 F.3d 603, 607 (7th Cir. 2000)), to “withhold[ing] a
fact . . . that any reasonable person would have known . . .
was the kind of thing the judge would wish to know,” id. (in-
ternal quotation marks omitted) (quoting Wilson v. Russo,
212 F.3d 781, 788 (3d Cir. 2000)), “reckless disregard” must
refer to “something more than negligence,” id.
   The Government argues that “[a]t no point did Appellee
argue that the good faith exception could not apply because
law enforcement provided the magistrate with an affidavit
that ‘recklessly omitted or misstated information,’ as
AFCCA found.” Brief for Appellant at 15–16, United States
v. Blackburn, No. 20-0071 (C.A.A.F. Jan. 16, 2020). It fur-
ther complains that the lack of “allegation at trial or on ap-
peal that a deliberately false or reckless statement was pre-
sented to a military magistrate” deprived the Government of
the opportunity to respond to particularized objections. Id.

   3 See id. at 390 n.13 (rubber-stamping is not “merely an excep-
tion to the good faith exception,” and is a basis to invalidate a
search authorization “the accused can argue in the first instance”).




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             United States v. Blackburn, No. 20-0071/AF
                        Opinion of the Court

at 13–14. We disagree. While a particularized objection must
be made, and the talismanic words “false” or “reckless disre-
gard of the truth” were not used, the record shows Appellee
in fact alleged that the Government provided false infor-
mation to the magistrate.
    In his written motion, Appellee argued the probable
cause affidavit was “completely absent” of any nexus be-
tween the camcorder and other devices; the affidavit “clearly
lacked sufficient information” of any connection; and the
agents “knew they had no evidence connecting [Appellee]’s
camcorder to his computer, yet they sought a search author-
ization for it anyway.” At the suppression hearing, Appellee
also argued that TSgt D never gave the magistrate evidence
that Appellee produced or disseminated child pornography
or said whether any child pornography was believed to re-
side on Appellee’s computer. Further, while TSgt D’s search
authorization request noted his belief that “evidence prov-
ing . . . intent to manufacture child pornography is located
within [Appellee’s] residence,” and trial counsel argued be-
fore the military judge that AFOSI “acted in good faith” be-
cause the circumstances reasonably led them to believe Ap-
pellee was manufacturing child pornography,4 Appellee
complained that nothing in the affidavit evidenced “sexually
explicit conduct that would merit child pornography,” and
the “mere fact that [AFOSI] decides to slap that on an affi-
davit does not make this a child pornography case.” Though
somewhat subtle, this theory was inherent to the defense
argument, and the defense’s arguments as a whole demon-
strate an accusation of at least recklessness in the search
authorization request, which adequately preserved this is-
sue on appeal.

   4   More bluntly, trial counsel stated at the suppression hearing:
         I know there’s been some back and forth about
         whether [ES] was nude or not, but the ground hit-
         ting, no kidding truth is the allegation that came to
         [AFOSI] was [Appellee] had been filming his 12
         year old daughter while she was undressed, while
         she was nude, and that gives them rise to say,
         “Hey, it looks like he could be manufacturing child
         pornography.”




                                  8
          United States v. Blackburn, No. 20-0071/AF
                     Opinion of the Court

    Moreover, the military judge addressed this point direct-
ly, finding no evidence that TSgt D provided false infor-
mation or recklessly disregarded the truth. This, combined
with Appellee’s arguments in the written motion and at the
hearing—which mirror his arguments here on appeal—both
distinguishes the present case from Perkins and illustrates
that Appellant was not deprived of the opportunity to re-
spond to the allegation of recklessness.
  B. The AFCCA erred in finding the military judge
        abused his discretion in applying the
                good faith exception
    This Court reviews a military judge’s denial of a motion
to suppress evidence for abuse of discretion. United States v.
Leedy, 65 M.J. 208, 212 (C.A.A.F. 2007). An abuse of discre-
tion occurs when a military judge’s “findings of fact are
clearly erroneous or his conclusions of law are incorrect.”
United States v. Erikson, 76 M.J. 231, 234 (C.A.A.F. 2017)
(internal quotation marks omitted) (quoting United States v.
Olson, 74 M.J. 132, 134 (C.A.A.F. 2015)). When reviewing a
lower court’s decision on a military judge’s ruling, we “typi-
cally have pierced through that intermediate level and ex-
amined the military judge’s ruling, then decided whether the
Court of Criminal Appeals was right or wrong in its exami-
nation of the military judge’s ruling.” United States v. Shel-
ton, 64 M.J. 32, 37 (C.A.A.F. 2006) (internal quotation
marks omitted) (citation omitted).
    In reviewing a ruling on a motion to suppress, the evi-
dence is considered in the light most favorable to the party
that prevailed on the motion. See, e.g., Leedy, 65 M.J. at 213.
The question whether TSgt D provided evidence that was
intentionally false or with a reckless disregard for the truth
is a question of fact, which we review for clear error. United
States v. Allen, 53 M.J. 402, 408 (C.A.A.F. 2000). “A deferen-
tial standard of review is appropriate to further the Fourth
Amendment’s strong preference for searches conducted pur-
suant to a warrant.” Massachusetts v. Upton, 466 U.S. 727,
733 (1984).
    The Fourth Amendment safeguards “[t]he right of the
people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and ef-
fects.” U.S. Const. amend. IV. This protects against “unrea-



                              9
            United States v. Blackburn, No. 20-0071/AF
                       Opinion of the Court

sonable searches and seizures” and requires warrants to be
supported by probable cause. Id. Absent probable cause, this
Court typically applies the exclusionary rule. See M.R.E.
311(a)(3); Nieto, 76 M.J. at 106.
    However, under the good faith exception in M.R.E.
311(c)(3), the results of a search authorization in fact un-
supported by probable cause will not require exclusion if: (1)
the magistrate had authority to grant the request; (2) the
magistrate had a substantial basis for finding probable
cause; and (3) law enforcement reasonably and in good faith
relied on the authorization.5 Nieto, 76 M.J. at 107. The sec-
ond prong is met when the agents have an objectively rea-
sonable belief that the magistrate had a substantial basis for
probable cause. Perkins, 78 M.J. at 387–88. As discussed su-
pra Part II.A., the exception is unavailable where the magis-
trate was “misled by information” law enforcement “knew
was false or would have known was false except for [their]
reckless disregard of the truth.” Leon, 468 U.S. 897 at 923.6
    We disagree with the AFCCA’s finding of recklessness.
First, the lower court failed to demonstrate that the military
judge’s finding of fact on this point was clearly erroneous or
to consider that it was bound to consider the evidence in the
light most favorable to the party that prevailed on the mo-
tion at trial.
    Second, though AFOSI had no direct evidence of child
pornography, they did have ES saying that Appellee surrep-
titiously recorded her preparing to shower, often entered the
room while she showered, and asked her for naked pictures.


   5 United States v. Carter describes this third element as turn-
ing on whether the search authorization was facially defective or
whether the police knew the magistrate simply rubber-stamped it.
54 M.J. 414, 421 (C.A.A.F. 2001).
   6  The Supreme Court in Franks, on which Leon built its “reck-
less disregard” exception, explained that “[b]ecause it is the mag-
istrate who must determine independently whether there is prob-
able cause, it would be an unthinkable imposition upon his
authority if a warrant affidavit, revealed after the fact to contain a
deliberately or reckless false statement, were to stand beyond im-
peachment.” 438 U.S. at 165 (citations omitted).




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           United States v. Blackburn, No. 20-0071/AF
                      Opinion of the Court

While AFOSI’s use of the phrase “child pornography” may
have constituted negligence, we agree that it did not “rise to
the level of a reckless disregard for the truth.” 2019 CCA
LEXIS 336, at *57–58, 2019 WL 3980730, at *20 (Lewis, J.,
concurring in part and dissenting in part and in the result).7
   Third, MB told AFOSI that Appellee was “tech savvy”
and had multiple computers at home that were regularly
used. Along with TSgt D’s understanding that people tend to
transfer camcorder videos to other devices, this further
counsels against a finding of recklessness. See Nieto, 76 M.J.
at 106 (officer’s experience may be useful in establishing
nexus); cf. Leedy, 65 M.J. at 213 (probable cause looks at
“practical considerations of everyday life on which reasona-
ble and prudent men, not legal technicians, act” (internal
quotation marks omitted) (citation omitted)).
   Fourth, legal counsel was on the call between TSgt D and
the magistrate, and the record reveals no objections from
him. See Perkins, 78 M.J. at 388 (agent’s reliance on lawyers’
advice “most significant[]” in determining objectively rea-
sonable belief in substantial basis for probable cause under
M.R.E 311(c)(3)(B)).


   7   Indeed, indecent recording—with which Appellee ultimately
was charged—and child pornography are offenses that might easi-
ly cover the same acts. Compare Manual for Courts-Martial, Unit-
ed States pt. IV, para. 45c.a.(a)(2) (2012 ed.) (prohibiting “know-
ingly . . . record[ing] . . . the private area of another person,
without that other person’s consent and under circumstances in
which that other person has a reasonable expectation of privacy”),
and para. 45c.a.(c)(2) (defining “ ‘private area’ ” as “the naked or
underwear-clad genitalia, anus, buttocks, or female areola or nip-
ple”), with para. 68b.b.(4)(a) (prohibiting “knowingly and wrong-
fully produc[ing] child pornography”), and para. 68b.c.(1) (defining
“ ‘[c]hild pornography’ ” as “material that contains either an ob-
scene visual depiction of a minor engaging in sexually explicit
conduct or a visual depiction of an actual minor engaging in sex-
ually explicit conduct”). The affidavit might simply reflect “a poor
understanding of when a depiction of a 12-year-old girl in some
state of undressing or depicted showering would meet the legal
definition of sexually explicit conduct.” 2019 CCA LEXIS 336, at
*58, 2019 WL 3980730, at *20 (Lewis, J., concurring in part and
dissenting in part and in the result).




                                11
          United States v. Blackburn, No. 20-0071/AF
                     Opinion of the Court

    Lastly, we agree with the AFCCA separate opinion that
the magistrate’s testimony counters the conclusion that she
was misled by the child pornography references. 2019 CCA
LEXIS 336, at *58–59, 2019 WL 3980730, at *20 (Lewis, J.,
concurring in part and dissenting in part and in the result).
The magistrate took into consideration the “seriousness of
the allegation,” the seeming pattern of behavior involving
recording devices, the request for naked pictures, and her
independent understanding that camcorder videos are typi-
cally transferred to other electronic devices.
    Even if there were not a sufficient nexus for probable
cause, AFOSI’s belief that the magistrate had a substantial
basis for probable cause was reasonable. Nieto is distin-
guishable. There, the appellant confessed to recording occu-
pants of latrines on his cell phone, and a search authoriza-
tion was issued for both that device and a laptop despite the
agent “not know[ing] whether the files on the cell phone
were transferrable to the laptop,” and despite the fact that
videos taken on a cell phone are generally viewed on that
same device. 76 M.J. at 104, 108. Here, TSgt D and the mag-
istrate’s commonsense understanding of camcorders sup-
ported their independent conclusions that the recordings
were transferable to computers. This understanding was not
“technologically outdated” as the agent’s understanding of
cell phones was in Nieto. Id. at 107. Furthermore, in Nieto,
the appellant was deployed and his “ownership of the laptop
in question was predicated on suspect information and cred-
ited to an unknown source,” id. at 108, whereas here Appel-
lee was a noncommissioned officer stationed with his family
at an Air Force base within the continental United States, so
it was certainly reasonable for the magistrate to assume
that the family had a computer that Appellee used, and then
for AFOSI to reasonably conclude that the magistrate found
a connection between the camcorder and a family computer.
    The requisites for application of the good faith exception
are satisfied here. The magistrate was competent, AFOSI’s
belief in her substantial basis for probable cause was
reasonable, and she did not rubber-stamp the request. The
AFCCA erred in finding the military judge abused his
discretion.




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           United States v. Blackburn, No. 20-0071/AF
                      Opinion of the Court


                          III. Decision

   The judgment of the United States Air Force Court of
Criminal Appeals is affirmed as to the Specification of
Charge I for sexual abuse of a child. It is reversed as to set-
ting aside the finding of guilty for the Specification of
Charge II for indecent recording and reversed as to setting
aside the sentence. The record is returned to the Judge Ad-
vocate General of the Air Force for remand to the AFCCA for
further review under Article 66, UCMJ, 10 U.S.C. § 866
(2018).8




   8 In light of the judgment of this Court, Appellee’s motion for
appropriate relief is denied as moot. Appellee’s Motion for Appro-
priate Relief at 1, United States v. Blackburn, No. 20-0071
(C.A.A.F. Mar. 3, 2020).




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          United States v. Blackburn, No. 20-0071/AF


   Judge MAGGS, concurring in the judgment.
   Certified Issue I is “[w]hether under Military Rule of Ev-
idence 311(d)(2)(A), Appellee waived a basis for suppression
that he did not raise at trial.” The asserted basis for sup-
pression is that the Government recklessly misstated or
omitted information in its application for a search authori-
zation and therefore cannot rely on the good faith exception
to the exclusionary rule in Military Rule of Evidence
(M.R.E.) 311(a). The Court answers Certified Issue I in the
negative. I respectfully disagree. A review of the record
shows that Appellee waived the basis for suppression at is-
sue. Despite our disagreement on this point, I concur in the
Court’s judgment that the case should be reversed and re-
manded to the United States Air Force Court of Criminal
Appeals (AFCCA) for further review under Article 66, Uni-
form Code of Military Justice (UCMJ), 10 U.S.C. § 866
(2018).
                     I. Certified Issue I
    Before trial, Appellee asked the military judge to sup-
press all evidence resulting from the search and seizure of
his electronics, including videos found on his personal desk-
top computer. Appellee made several arguments in support
of his request. One of these arguments concerned the good
faith exception to the exclusionary rule. Appellee contended
that an agent of the Air Force Office of Special Investiga-
tions (AFOSI) could not have relied in good faith on a search
authorization because the military magistrate who issued
the search authorization did not have a substantial basis for
determining the existence of probable cause. Appellee did
not make the distinct argument, upon which he now relies,
that the AFOSI agent failed to act in good faith because he
recklessly misstated or omitted information when seeking a
search authorization from the military magistrate. Accord-
ingly, Appellee waived this basis for suppression and cannot
raise it on appeal.
         A. The Good Faith Exception and Waiver
   An accused might raise a variety of objections when the
government asserts the good faith exception to the exclu-
sionary rule. Depending on the facts, the accused might ar-
gue that the government has not established one or more of
           United States v. Blackburn, No. 20-0071/AF
           Judge MAGGS, concurring in the judgment

the elements of the good faith exception as listed in M.R.E.
311(c)(3) and interpreted by this Court. This rule provides:
       Evidence that was obtained as a result of an unlaw-
       ful search or seizure may be used if:
           (A) the search or seizure resulted from an
       authorization to search, seize or apprehend issued
       by an individual competent to issue the
       authorization under Mil. R. Evid. 315(d) or from a
       search warrant or arrest warrant issued by
       competent civilian authority;
           (B) the individual issuing the authorization or
       warrant had a substantial basis for determining
       the existence of probable cause; and
           (C) the officials seeking and executing the au-
       thorization or warrant reasonably and with good
       faith relied on the issuance of the authorization or
       warrant. Good faith is to be determined using an
       objective standard.1
Id. Additionally, again depending on the facts, the accused
might argue that the good faith exception does not apply for
any of four reasons that this Court identified in United
States v. Lopez, 35 M.J. 35 (C.M.A. 1992), based on the Su-
preme Court’s interpretation of the Fourth Amendment in
United States v. Leon, 468 U.S. 897 (1984). The Court in
Lopez stated:
       [1] [T]he good-faith exception will not apply when
       part of the information given to the authorizing of-
       ficial is intentionally false or given with “reckless
       disregard for the truth.” [2] It will also not apply
       where “no reasonably well trained officer should re-
       ly on the warrant.” [3] The exception also will not
       apply when the “affidavit [is] ‘so lacking in indicia
       of probable cause as to render official belief in its
       existence entirely unreasonable.’ ” [4] Finally, it


   1 We have interpreted M.R.E. 311(c)(3)(B) to require that the
law enforcement official claiming to have acted in good faith had
to have an “objectively reasonable belief that the magistrate [issu-
ing the search authorization] had a ‘substantial basis’ for deter-
mining the existence of probable cause.” United States v. Perkins,
78 M.J. 381, 387 (C.A.A.F. 2019) (quoting United States v. Carter,
54 M.J. 414, 422 (C.A.A.F. 2001)).




                                 2
           United States v. Blackburn, No. 20-0071/AF
           Judge MAGGS, concurring in the judgment

       will not apply when the authorization “may be so
       facially deficient—i.e., in failing to particularize the
       place to be searched or the things to be seized—
       that the executing officers cannot reasonably pre-
       sume it to be valid.”2
35 M.J. at 41–42 (fifth alteration in original) (quoting Leon,
468 U.S. at 923).
    The AFCCA determined that the good faith exception did
not apply because this case fell within the first circumstance
identified in Lopez for when the good faith exception cannot
apply. Specifically, the AFCCA concluded that the Govern-
ment did “recklessly omit or misstate the information [sub-
mitted] to obtain a search authorization.” United States v.
Blackburn, No. ACM 39397, 2019 CCA LEXIS 336, at *50,
2019 WL 3980730, at *17 (A.F. Ct. Crim. App. Aug. 22,
2019) (unpublished). Certified Issue I turns on whether Ap-
pellee raised this particular objection at trial. If Appellee did
not raise it, then he waived it under M.R.E. 311(d)(2)(A),
which provides: “When evidence has been disclosed prior to
arraignment . . . the defense must make any motion to sup-
press or objection under this rule prior to submission of a
plea. . . . Failure to so move or object constitutes a waiver of
the motion or objection.” Applying M.R.E. 311(d)(2)(A), this
Court has held that an accused must make a “particularized
objection” to the admission of evidence to preserve the objec-
tion. Perkins, 78 M.J. at 390 (internal quotation marks omit-
ted) (quoting United States v. Robinson, 77 M.J. 303, 307 &
n.6 (C.A.A.F. 2018); United States v. Stringer, 37 M.J. 120,
125 (C.M.A. 1993)). My review of the record leads me to con-
clude that Appellee did not make the particularized objec-
tion upon which he now relies in either his written suppres-
sion motion or during oral argument on the motion.
            B. Appellee’s Written Suppression Motion
    In his written motion to suppress the evidence obtained
during the authorized search, Appellee made four particu-
larized arguments, which he summarized as follows:


   2  The third reason identified in Lopez overlaps with M.R.E.
311(c)(3)(B) as that provision has been interpreted by this Court.




                                  3
           United States v. Blackburn, No. 20-0071/AF
           Judge MAGGS, concurring in the judgment

       [1] The digital evidence found on [Appellee’s] com-
       puter should be suppressed because the search was
       not supported by probable cause and the search au-
       thorization was overbroad. [2] The good-faith ex-
       ception does not apply because, under [United
       States v. Nieto, 76 M.J. 101 (C.A.A.F. 2017)], the
       military magistrate did not have a substantial ba-
       sis for determining probable cause existed. [3] Fur-
       ther, the inevitable discovery rule does not apply
       because investigators had no information and were
       pursuing no leads which would have led them to
       videos on [Appellee’s] desktop. [4] Finally, the ex-
       clusion of this evidence results in appreciable de-
       terrence of future unlawful searches and the bene-
       fits of such deterrence would outweigh the costs to
       the justice system.
    In making these four arguments, Appellee nowhere as-
serted—either explicitly or implicitly—that the Government
recklessly misstated or omitted information in its submis-
sion to the military magistrate. Of Appellee’s four argu-
ments, only the second concerned the good faith exception to
the exclusionary rule.3 This argument addressed only the
requirements of M.R.E. 311(c)(3)(B) and the third circum-
stance identified in Lopez in which the good faith exception
cannot apply. Specifically, Appellee asserted that the mili-
tary magistrate did not have a substantial basis for deter-
mining probable cause because “the military magistrate had
no facts to draw a nexus between [Appellee’s] camcorder and
his desktop computer.” Appellee added: “On even better facts
for the government, [the United States Court of Appeals for
the Armed Forces] ruled in Nieto that the good faith excep-
tion did not apply because the military magistrate had no
substantial basis for determining probable cause existed.”



   3  The first argument addressed M.R.E. 311(a)(2), which pro-
vides for the exclusion of evidence from an unlawful search, in-
cluding a search made without probable cause. The third argu-
ment concerned M.R.E. 311(c)(2), which creates an exception to
the exclusionary rule in M.R.E. 311(a). The fourth argument con-
cerned M.R.E. 311(a)(3), which provides that evidence is to be ex-
cluded only if the benefits of deterring unlawful searches outweigh
the costs to the justice system.




                                4
          United States v. Blackburn, No. 20-0071/AF
          Judge MAGGS, concurring in the judgment

    In United States v. Nieto, two soldiers alleged that the
appellant had used his cell phone to record them in the la-
trine, and investigators then sought and received authoriza-
tion from a military magistrate to search and seize the ap-
pellant’s cell phone and laptop. 76 M.J. at 103–04. This
Court held that there was no probable cause to search the
laptop and that the evidence obtained from the laptop
should have been suppressed under the exclusionary rule in
M.R.E. 311(a). Id. at 107–08. The Court held that the good
faith exception to the exclusionary rule did not apply be-
cause the requirement in M.R.E. 311(c)(3) was not met. Id.
at 108. The Court reasoned that “the military magistrate
was not provided with substantive oral information linking
[Appellee’s] misconduct to the laptop.” Id. There was no al-
legation in Nieto, and no allegation in Appellee’s written mo-
tion in this case, that the investigators in either case had
intentionally or recklessly provided false information to the
military magistrate.
          C. Oral Argument on Appellee’s Motion
    During oral argument on the suppression motion, de-
fense counsel generally adhered to the contentions in Appel-
lee’s written motion. Addressing the good faith exception to
the exclusionary rule, defense counsel asserted:
      Why am I asking you to suppress this [sic] electron-
      ics? No probable cause and that search authoriza-
      tion was overbroad. And so with that in my mind,
      we next fail—or we move on to the other saving
      graces here, the good faith exception. Sir, I can dis-
      pense with this one pretty quickly—that was
      brought up in Nieto as well—you can’t use the good
      faith exception if the magistrate didn’t have a sub-
      stantial basis for probable cause. That is a required
      finding in order to use the good faith exception.
In this passage, defense counsel was again addressing the
requirements of M.R.E. 311(c)(3)(B) and the third circum-
stance identified in Lopez in which the good faith exception
cannot apply. Defense counsel was asserting that the AFOSI
agents could not have acted in good faith because the mili-
tary magistrate did not have a substantial basis for conclud-




                                5
           United States v. Blackburn, No. 20-0071/AF
           Judge MAGGS, concurring in the judgment

ing that there was probable cause.4 Defense counsel did not
contend that the investigators had recklessly omitted or
misstated information in their submission to the military
magistrate.
    Because defense counsel never made such an argument,
trial counsel also did not address the question of whether
the investigators misled the military magistrate when trial
counsel discussed the issue of good faith. Instead, trial coun-
sel simply responded to Appellee’s argument under M.R.E.
311(c)(3)(B) by asserting that the investigators had a rea-
sonable belief that the military magistrate had a substantial
basis to issue the search authorization. Trial counsel argued:
       They acted in good faith, they acted on what they
       thought was a valid search authorization given by
       the magistrate . . . . I know there’s been some back
       and forth about whether she was nude or not, but
       the ground hitting, no kidding truth is the allega-
       tion that came to them was Sergeant Blackburn
       had been filming his 12 year old daughter while she
       was undressed, while she was nude, and that gives
       them rise to say, “Hey, it looks like he could be
       manufacturing child pornography.” Additionally,
       he’s requesting these nude photos of her as well. So
       in their minds they’re thinking, “Okay, this is what
       we need to take,” so they’re acting in good faith, act-
       ing on what they believe was reasonable when they
       went and did that seizure.
Emphasis added.
   Appellee, however, asserts on appeal that his defense
counsel did raise the objection at issue at two other points
during oral argument on the motion. First, he contends that
defense counsel argued that “the identification of child por-
nography as the alleged crime was inflammatory and the


   4  As explained above, we have interpreted M.R.E. 311(c)(3)(B)
not to require the military magistrate to have a substantial basis
for search authorization but for the law enforcement agent seeking
the search authorization to have a reasonable belief that the mili-
tary magistrate had a substantial basis to issue the search author-
ization. Perkins, 78 M.J. at 387.




                                 6
           United States v. Blackburn, No. 20-0071/AF
           Judge MAGGS, concurring in the judgment

agents were not aware of any information which met the el-
ements of the offense.” In support of this position, Appellee
cites the following passage from the oral argument:
       The government did not charge possession,
       viewing, or production of child pornography. And,
       sir, if you look at that evidence, you look at what’s
       in the affidavit, none of that is sexually explicit
       conduct that would merit child pornography, that
       label. The mere fact that OSI decides to slap that
       on an affidavit does not make this a child
       pornography case . . . .
    I do not believe that the quoted passage shows that Ap-
pellee raised his current objection that the Government had
recklessly misstated or omitted information in its submis-
sion to the military magistrate. Instead, the quoted passage
concerned an argument about which precedents to follow on
the issue of probable cause.
    An examination of the record reveals the following se-
quence of events. In Appellee’s written motion to suppress
the evidence, as noted above, Appellee argued that the mili-
tary judge should follow Nieto and conclude that there was
no probable cause for the military magistrate to authorize
the search of Appellee’s computers. In the Government’s
written response, the Government attempted to distinguish
Nieto and to liken Appellee’s case to three other cases in
which this Court or other courts had upheld authorizations
to search an accused’s computer for child pornography.5 Dur-
ing subsequent oral argument, defense counsel attempted to
distinguish those three cases by arguing that they involved
child pornography while this case did not. Defense counsel
asserted: “This is not a child pornography case.” The quoted
passage above then immediately followed. Defense counsel
afterward asserted:
       And Your Honor can leave it at that and we are
       right back to where we started with Nieto. Howev-

   5  The three decisions cited by the Government were United
States v. Lancina, No. NMCCA 201600242, 2017 CCA LEXIS 436,
2017 WL 2829303 (N-M. Ct. Crim. App. 2017), United States v.
Clayton, 68 M.J. 419 (C.A.A.F. 2010), and United States v. Allen,
53 M.J. 402 (C.A.A.F. 2000).




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          United States v. Blackburn, No. 20-0071/AF
          Judge MAGGS, concurring in the judgment

      er, if you consider that at all, if you look at any of
      the cases cited in the government’s motion, I just
      want you to know that they are distinguishable
      from this case.
    The record further shows that the military judge under-
stood the question was whether Nieto was distinguishable
on this issue of probable cause. The military judge stated:
“To me the issue is probable cause, nexus. What’s specifical-
ly charged, criminally, is not as critical as . . . what we’re
talking about here as far as nexus and probable cause.” Ac-
cordingly, the passage quoted by Appellee had nothing to do
with the objection that Appellee now asserts. Instead, Appel-
lee’s point in that passage that this case is not about child
pornography despite the assertion in the affidavit was a
counterargument to the Government’s attempt to distinguish
Nieto by citing three cases that did involve child pornogra-
phy; it was not the independent argument that Appellee is
now advancing that the Government recklessly omitted or
misstated information.
    Second, Appellee argues that his counsel preserved his
current objection when he argued that the Government
failed to prove “the technical specifications of the camcorder,
and specifically if files could be transferred from the cam-
corder to other electronic devices.” I disagree. A review of
the record shows the following sequence of arguments and
counterarguments. As described previously, Appellee argued
in his written motion that the evidence should be suppressed
because there was no probable cause based on Nieto. In re-
sponse, in addition to citing the three cases mentioned
above, the Government also asserted that Nieto was distin-
guishable because the recording device used in this case was
not a cell phone (as in Nieto) but instead “a camera, some-
thing with typically low storage, leaving people to transfer
the data taken to computers.”
    During oral argument, defense counsel disputed the dis-
tinction between a cell phone and the camcorder, asserting
that the AFOSI agent “didn’t know the storage capacity of
this camcorder” and that the camcorder at issue in fact “had
an eight gigabyte storage.” Defense counsel added: “That’s a
lot of storage. Many cell phones have a similar amount of
storage.” Defense counsel concluded by asserting: “The gov-




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          United States v. Blackburn, No. 20-0071/AF
          Judge MAGGS, concurring in the judgment

ernment’s entire case hangs on this supposition that people
just back up things [from] their camcorder. That’s it, sir, and
that’s not good enough in light of recent case law.” Again,
the entire argument concerned probable cause and the ap-
plication of the Nieto precedent. The argument was not that
the AFOSI agent had acted other than in good faith because
he recklessly omitted or misstated information.
               D. The Military Judge’s Ruling
    The military judge denied the motion to suppress the ev-
idence. He agreed with Appellee that the Government had
failed to show probable cause based on Nieto because the
AFOSI agent “did not provide a particularized nexus be-
tween the camcorder and the accused’s laptop or other elec-
tronic media devices.” But the military judge agreed with
the Government that the evidence was admissible under the
good faith exception to the exclusionary rule. In reaching
this conclusion, the military judge considered all of the re-
quirements of M.R.E. 311(c)(3). The military judge also ad-
dressed the four circumstances that this Court identified in
Lopez for when the good faith exception cannot apply, as-
serting that “[t]hose circumstances are not applicable in this
case.” Cursorily addressing the first circumstance, the mili-
tary judge stated from the bench: “There is no evidence that
the magistrate was ‘misled by information in the affidavit’ or
that [the AFOSI agent] provided false information or showed
a reckless disregard for the truth.” The military judge re-
peated this statement with essentially the same words in his
written opinion.
    Appellee argues that the objection he now asserts was
not waived because the military judge made the quoted
statements. I disagree. Under M.R.E. 311(d)(2)(A), as inter-
preted in Perkins, the accused waives a basis for suppression
unless the accused makes a particularized objection. The
military judge’s comments do not indicate that Appellee
made the particularized objection that the good faith excep-
tion to the exclusionary rule could not apply because an
AFOSI agent had recklessly omitted or misstated infor-
mation. On the contrary, the military judge’s comments
merely confirm that this objection was “not applicable in this
case” and that Appellee had presented “no evidence” in sup-




                              9
           United States v. Blackburn, No. 20-0071/AF
           Judge MAGGS, concurring in the judgment

port of such an objection. These conclusions are consistent
with the rest of the record, which, as discussed above, shows
Appellee did not make the objection that he now makes. A
contrary interpretation of the military judge’s comments
would negate this Court’s holding in Perkins that the ac-
cused must make a particularized objection. It would sug-
gest that any time a military judge concluded that all of the
requirements for the good faith exception to the exclusionary
rule had been met, the accused could challenge the military
judge’s ruling on any ground on appeal by asserting (even
for the first time) that one of the requirements was not met.
                        E. Conclusion
    Under M.R.E. 311(d)(2)(A), as described above, objections
to the admission of evidence must be made with particulari-
ty at trial and, if they are not made at trial, they are waived.
As shown above, Appellee never argued at trial that the
good faith exception could not apply because the AFOSI
agent in this case recklessly omitted or misstated infor-
mation in his submission to the military magistrate. The ar-
gument therefore was waived.6 The AFCCA therefore erred
in its reasoning.
    The requirement that a party raise an objection at trial
serves an important purpose. In Perkins, we explained that
the accused must make specific objections at trial so that the
government has the opportunity to present evidence in con-
testing them. This case illustrates this point well. At oral
argument before this Court, the Government offered con-
crete examples of the kind of evidence that it would have
sought to produce if Appellee had argued at trial that the
AFOSI agent had recklessly omitted or misstated infor-
mation to the magistrate. Counsel for the Government ex-
plained that trial counsel could have asked the AFOSI agent
why he used the phrase “child pornography” instead of “in-
decent recording.” And trial counsel could have asked the
magistrate whether the AFOSI agent recklessly or inten-


   6  Perhaps recognizing that the argument was waived, appel-
late defense counsel did not raise the argument on appeal to the
AFCCA.




                              10
          United States v. Blackburn, No. 20-0071/AF
          Judge MAGGS, concurring in the judgment

tionally attempted to mislead her and whether she was mis-
led. The answers to these questions would be highly relevant
if Appellee had raised the objection that he now asserts.
                II. Certified Issues II and III
    Certified Issue II is “[w]hether the Air Force Court of
Criminal Appeals erred in finding the military judge abused
his discretion when he denied the motion to suppress digital
evidence pursuant to the good faith exception.” Because the
AFCCA relied on grounds that were waived by Appellee, I
answer this question in the affirmative. I would reverse the
AFCCA and remand the case to allow the AFCCA to com-
plete its review under Article 66, UCMJ, considering in the
first instance any arguments with respect to the exclusion-
ary rule that were not waived and not already addressed.
    Certified Issue III is “[w]hether the military judge
properly denied the motion to suppress digital evidence
pursuant to Military Rule of Evidence 311(a)(3), a
determination not reviewed by the Air Force Court of
Criminal Appeals.” I do not reach this question. Deciding
this issue is only necessary if the good faith exception does
not apply, which is a question that the AFCCA must
determine on remand when it considers any arguments that
have not been waived.




                              11
