            NOT RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION
                       File Name: 12a1284n.06

                                      No. 11-6353

                      UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                           FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT


UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,                   )
                                            )       ON APPEAL FROM THE UNITED
             Plaintiff-Appellee,            )       STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR
                                            )       THE WESTERN DISTRICT OF
      v.                                    )       KENTUCKY
                                            )
TOREE SIMS,                                 )                                   FILED
                                            )                               Dec 12, 2012
             Defendant-Appellant.           )                         LEONARD GREEN, Clerk


BEFORE: CLAY and STRANCH, Circuit Judges; BELL, District Judge *

      BELL, District Judge. Defendant-Appellant Toree Sims appeals a district court

order denying his motions to suppress wiretap evidence and to compel discovery. For the

following reasons, we AFFIRM.

                                    BACKGROUND

      Detroit Drug Enforcement Agency (“DEA”) agents began investigating a group

known as the Black Mafia Family in November 2003. In May 2004, a judge authorized the

DEA to intercept phone calls to and from Terry Flenory, who was believed to be the head of

the Black Mafia Family.     Agents intercepted multiple calls concerning the sale and



      *
         The Honorable Robert Holmes Bell, United States District Judge for the Western
District of Michigan, sitting by designation.
No. 11-6353
United States v. Sims

distribution of cocaine between Flenory and a man suspected to be Sims. On June 17, 2004,

a driver for the organization was stopped by police on his way to Louisville. During a seach

of the vehicle, the police recovered ten kilograms of cocaine and a cell phone with a record

of a recent call to “Qiana Toree.” The phone number listed for “Quiana Toree” was the same

number used by the man believed to be Sims whose calls with Flenory had been intercepted

by the DEA. The Detroit DEA notified the Louisville DEA about both the calls and the stop,

and, as a result, Louisville DEA agents applied for court authority for a wiretap of the cell

phone Sims used in the calls with Flenory.

       The June 28, 2004, affidavit for the wiretap detailed the Detroit investigation and how

that investigation had intercepted Sims’s conversations with Flenory. It also discussed how

a confidential source, SOI-9, told DEA agents he had bought cocaine from Sims in late 2003.

A judge in the Western District of Kentucky issued an order authorizing the tap, and on July

30, this same judge ordered the tap to be extended an additional thirty days. Numerous calls

concerning the sale and distribution of cocaine were intercepted, leading to a search of the

home of Karen Johnson, Sims’s girlfriend, where scales and drug ledgers were found, along

with Black Mafia insignia. A grand jury indicted Sims on violations of 21 U.S.C. §§ 846 and

841(a)(1). Sims moved to suppress the evidence gathered with the wiretap and to compel the

government to provide him with an unredacted copy of a wiretap affidavit from a separate




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United States v. Sims

case. Both motions were denied, and following a jury trial, Sims was convicted. Sims timely

appealed the denial of these motions.




                                STANDARD OF REVIEW

       When evaluating a decision on a motion to suppress a wiretap, the Court reviews the

district court’s findings of fact for clear error and questions of law de novo. United States

v. Stewart, 306 F.3d 295, 304 (6th Cir. 2002). In reviewing the validity of a wiretap order,

the Court affords “great deference” to the issuing judge. United States v. Corrado, 227 F.3d

528, 539 (6th Cir. 2000).

       “A district court’s decision on a discovery matter is reviewed for abuse of discretion.”

United States v. Warshak, 631 F.3d 266, 296 (6th Cir. 2010).

                                        ANALYSIS

I. Wiretap

       Sims alleges four errors in the district court’s denial of his motion to suppress the

wiretap: (1) the June 28 affidavit in support of the wiretap made an insufficient showing of

necessity; (2) inconsistencies in this affidavit merited an evidentiary hearing; (3) this

affidavit failed to establish probable cause; and (4) the July 30 affidavit in support of the

extension of the wiretap failed to establish probable cause.

       A. Necessity


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United States v. Sims

       The wiretap statute, 18 U.S.C. § 2518(1)(c), requires that “[e]ach application for an

order authorizing or approving the interception of a wire . . . communication” include “a full

and complete statement as to whether or not other investigative procedures have been tried

and failed or why they reasonably appear to be unlikely to succeed if tried or to be too

dangerous.” The reason for this “necessity” requirement is “to assure that wiretapping is not

resorted to in situations where traditional investigative techniques would suffice to expose

the crime” and to prevent wiretapping from being “routinely employed as the initial step in

criminal investigation.” United States v. Landmesser, 553 F.2d 17, 19-20 (6th Cir. 1977)

(quoted cases omitted).      “All that is required is that the investigators give serious

consideration to the non-wiretap techniques prior to applying for wiretap authority and that

the court be informed of the reasons for the investigators’ belief that such non-wiretap

techniques have been or will likely be inadequate.” United States v. Alfano, 838 F.2d 158,

163 (6th Cir. 1988) (quoted case omitted).

       Sims raises three reasons the district court committed error in finding that the

necessity requirement was met: (a) the government used the tap as an initial investigation

technique; (b) the affidavit failed to allege specific factual circumstances to support its

conclusion that normal investigative techniques would be particularly ineffective for Sims;

and (c) in a different case, a similar affidavit regarding Sims’s co-conspirator, Reginald Rice,

was found to have failed the necessity requirement. These arguments are not persuasive.


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United States v. Sims

       First, the affidavit clearly demonstrated that other techniques were used before the

wiretap. The affidavit showed that the Louisville investigation of Sims existed before the

Louisville DEA learned of the Detroit DEA’s intercepted conversations of the person

believed to be Sims. The affiant, DEA Agent Fitzgerald, disclosed in the affidavit that on

February 9, 2004, SOI-9 had told agents that Sims sold ounce and kilogram quantities of

cocaine. Moreover, during surveillance in February, DEA agents saw Sims enter a Cingular

Wireless facility in Indiana. Agents served a subpoena on Cingular and obtained the records

of telephone accounts in Sims’s name. Subsequently, on April 8, 2004, agents obtained an

order authorizing the installation of a pen register and a trap/trace device. Additionally, from

mid-February until June, agents went to Sims’s home numerous times to attempt a trash pull.

This was significant evidence of an on-going investigation, and Sims’s claims that the

government did not have such an investigation devoted to Sims before the June call

interceptions are unfounded.

       Second, the June affidavit provided sufficient detail about the techniques the

government did not attempt, despite Sims’s claims about “boilerplate” language and

paragraphs copied nearly verbatim from other affidavits used in different cases. “[T]he mere

fact that the affidavit . . . rested in part on statements that would be equally applicable to

almost any. . .case [of that variety] does not render the affidavit insufficient” provided that

there is also “information about particular facts of the case at hand which would indicate that


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United States v. Sims

wiretaps are not being routinely employed as the initial step in criminal investigation.”

Landmesser, 553 F.2d at 20 (quoted cases omitted). “Congress intended that the showing

envisioned by § 2518(1)(c) be tested in a practical and common sense fashion.” Id. (citation

and quotation marks omitted). The June affidavit detailed the investigative techniques

previously used in this case and included a thorough discussion of the reasons the affiant did

not believe that specific unattempted investigative techniques – such as undercover agents,

search warrants, tracking devices, grand jury subpoenas, and interviews of subjects – would

be successful in this particular case.

       Third, the affidavit in this case is distinguishable from the affidavit to which Sims

refers. In United States v. Rice, 478 F.3d 704 (6th Cir. 2007), this Court upheld the district

court’s grant of a motion to suppress a wiretap. However, the district court in Rice

determined that necessity was not shown because the affiant included a “reckless[]”

“misleading statement” about the general ineffectiveness of physical surveillance – stating

that members of the criminal organization in question routinely made threats of violence,

carried firearms, and wore bullet-proof vests – despite providing no support that such a

danger of violence pertained to physical surveillance of the specific target himself. 478 F.3d

at 707-09. The district court further found that “[o]ther than some uncorroborated thoughts

and opinions there is no evidence that any other investigative technique was ever used or

even seriously considered.” Id. (Citation and quotation marks omitted).


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United States v. Sims

       The key difference between Rice and the present case is that the affidavit here

discussed multiple examples of actual investigative techniques that had already been used

for Sims, such as the use of confidential sources, a pen register, trap and trace information,

physical surveillance, attempts at trash pulls, and the interception of phone calls on Flenory’s

phone. The affidavit provided specific reasons why these already-used techniques were of

limited value going forward. The government is not required to exhaust every avenue.

Landmesser, 553 F.2d at 19-20. Accordingly, Sims’s arguments that the government never

discussed certain methods, such as developing a new source or using another suspect, Torian

Vaughn, to obtain evidence against Sims, are not sufficient to undermine the district court’s

necessity finding.

       The issuing judge is owed “great deference” in a review of the validity of a wiretap

order. Corrado, 227 F.3d at 539. In light of that deference, and the affidavit’s significant

discussion of other investigative techniques previously used and their limitations going

forward, the district court did not commit clear error in finding the necessity requirement

satisfied.

       B. Evidentiary Hearing

       Sims’s second argument is that it was error for the district court to deny an evidentiary

hearing after he made a sufficient preliminary showing of false or misleading representations.

“[W]here the defendant makes a substantial preliminary showing that a false statement


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United States v. Sims

knowingly and intentionally, or with reckless disregard for the truth, was included by the

affiant in the warrant affidavit, and if the allegedly false statement is necessary to the finding

of probable cause, the Fourth Amendment requires that a hearing be held at the defendant’s

request.” Franks v. Delaware, 438 U.S. 154, 155-56 (1978). The same standard applies to

warrants for wiretaps. United States v. Giacalone, 853 F.2d 470, 474-75 (6th Cir. 1988).

       Sims depends on alleged contradictions in the affidavit. First, in paragraph 60, Agent

Fitzgerald stated that a wiretap was necessary “to identify and prosecute the Organization’s

source(s) of supply.” But in paragraph 58 he identified Sims as the “cell head for this

distribution organization in the Louisville area, receiving cocaine from TERRANCE

FLENORY,” indicating he already knew Sims’s source of supply. However, this is not an

inconsistency. Paragraph 58 indicated that the sources in question were sources of supply

in California and Texas from which unknown members of the organization obtained cocaine,

not Sims’s source of supply. The fact that the DEA knew that Sims received cocaine from

Flenory did not undermine the DEA’s goal of identifying sources, nor did it make that stated

goal misleading.

       Second, Sims points out that Agent Fitzgerald stated in paragraph 63 that the

government would not be able to gather information by using a confidential source, but then

also stated in paragraph 64 that the government already had a source, SOI-9, who claimed

to have bought cocaine from Sims. Sims’s argument takes the statements out of context.


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United States v. Sims

These paragraphs explained that SOI-9 was no longer useful because (a) he had not bought

cocaine from Sims for six months and (b) he was a lower-level distributor who could not

possibly gather the high-level information investigators sought. Thus, Agent Fitzgerald’s

statement that the government could not gather the information it needed through the use of

a confidential source was not misleading or contradictory.

       Third, Sims highlights Agent Fitzgerald’s statement in paragraph 67 that physical

surveillance was unlikely to be useful, when the affidavit made it clear in paragraph 46 that

the one time the government tried this technique (i.e. at the Cingular store) it succeeded in

obtaining useful information. But these paragraphs stated that this physical surveillance,

while useful in the one instance, had reached the ends of its usefulness. Notably, the

affidavit specified that such surveillance did not provide information about the scope of the

organization, information about the identity of co-conspirators or their roles, or information

about customers or sources of supply.

       Fourth, Sims alleges misrepresentations in regard to Agent Fitzgerald’s interpretations

in paragraph 49 of the words used in the conversations overheard. There is no basis for this

allegation. The affidavit stated exactly what words were said and what Agent Fitzgerald’s

interpretation of those words was, based on his experience. The later confusion at trial over

whether “pink slip” was said or “pink suit” (Sims’s nickname) does not change the fact that

the agents reasonably interpreted the phrasing, in conjunction with Sims saying he was


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United States v. Sims

“done” and “about finished,” as code that meant Sims was out of cocaine. The fact that these

phrases could be interpreted as innocuous does not suggest that the agent misinterpreted

them; the purpose of having a code is to talk about drugs using innocuous-sounding

language.

       Fifth, Sims again takes issue with the fact that some language used in the affidavits

for the Detroit wiretaps was adopted nearly verbatim here. As discussed earlier, there is

nothing wrong with this practice. Because the same operation was being run out of Detroit,

it is reasonable that the surveillance techniques that were deemed not to be useful in regard

to the cell leaders from Detroit would also be deemed non-useful for the same or similar

reasons for Sims, the cell leader in Louisville.

       Sixth, Sims points to paragraph 61where Agent Fitzgerald stated his belief that it was

“highly doubtful” that Sims was conducting cocaine distribution himself, and that it was

more likely that Sims was managing and directing. He argues this contradicts paragraph 45

in which Agent Fitzgerald states that SOI-9 bought cocaine from Sims.            These two

paragraphs are not contradictory because they refer to different time periods. Paragraph 61

refers to Agent Fitzgerald’s belief at the time the affidavit was written, June 28, 2004.

Paragraph 45 referred to purchases allegedly made by an uncorroborated source several

months prior.




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United States v. Sims

       Seventh, Sims claims paragraph 71 is misleading. In this paragraph, Agent Fitzgerald

described the shortcomings of tracking devices. Sims compares this paragraph to a parallel

paragraph in an affidavit for a wiretap from a different investigation, which also found that

tracking devices would be unsuccessful. It is Sims’s contention that because the other case

noted that the suspect changed cars frequently (which Sims did not do), it was misleading for

Agent Fitzgerald to reach the same conclusion in this case. Agent Fitzgerald’s conclusion

was not misleading.     Agent Fitzgerald’s conclusion that tracking devices would be

unsuccessful “in this case” was supported by facts that did not include changing cars

frequently.

       Last, Sims alleges that paragraphs 60 and 68B of the July affidavit used for the

wiretap extension are contradictory. In paragraph 60, Agent Fitzgerald stated that, based on

numerous intercepted calls, Sims was continually receiving shipments of cocaine from

Detroit. In 68B, Agent Fitzgerald stated that on one occasion Sims told members of his

organization that he had not received a shipment for three to four weeks. These paragraphs

are not contradictory because they are based on statements Sims made during intercepted

calls. There is no evidence that Sims was telling the truth when he stated he had not received

a shipment for a few weeks. Moreover, even if Sims had not received a shipment in a few

weeks, the intercepted calls described in paragraphs 13 to 52 show that the organization

continued to participate in drug distribution activities. Considered in light of the entire


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United States v. Sims

affidavit (and considering the deference owed to the issuing judge), the recitations in

paragraphs 60 and 68B are not contradictory or misleading.

       In conclusion, none of the highlighted paragraphs in the affidavit were misleading nor

do they evidence internal contradictions. Moreover, even if some of them were misleading,

Sims has not shown that the other elements of the preliminary showing necessary for a

Franks hearing are present; there is no evidence that Agent Fitzgerald made a false statement

“knowingly and intentionally” or that any such statement was “necessary” on its own to the

finding of probable cause. See Franks, 438 U.S. at 155-56. Thus, the district court did not

commit clear error in refusing to grant an evidentiary hearing.

       C. Probable Cause - June Affidavit

       Sims contends it was error for the district court to find that probable cause existed for

the initial wiretap. “The basic standards for a wiretap are similar to those for a search

warrant . . . . Under this standard, the question that must be decided in issuing a warrant is

whether there is probable cause to believe that evidence of a crime will be uncovered.”

Alfano, 838 F.2d at 161-62.

       The main basis for Sims’s argument is that the cell phone was registered to Qiana

Lawson not to Sims. However, as with code language, it is common for drug conspirators

to register their phones under different names, and that fact cannot on its own defeat probable

cause. The only probable cause necessary is that the phone itself is being used in connection


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United States v. Sims

with an offense or commonly used by someone committing the offense. See United States

v. Giacalone, 853 F.2d 470, 478 (6th Cir. 1988). There were many facts in the affidavit that

supported a finding of probable cause that the phone was used in the drug conspiracy and that

Sims was using it. These facts included: (a) information gathered from the Detroit wire,

including conversations by an unknown male believed to be Sims; (b) Vaughn’s cell-phone

contact list which indicated the phone number in question belonged to Sims; (c) information

from SOI-9 that Sims was involved in distributing cocaine; (d) detailed information from toll

records and the pen register connecting Sims to the cocaine organization; and (e) over 200

calls using the phone in June 2004 to and from others known to be involved in the cocaine

organization, including Flenory. Given all of these facts, and the deference owed to the

issuing judge, it was not clear error for the district court to find probable cause.

       D. Probable Cause - July Affidavit

       Sims also contests the probable cause finding for the extension of the wiretap. But

his main justification is that this extension was tainted by the alleged insufficiency of the

June affidavit. Moreover, the July affidavit showed that Sims used the telephone to discuss

and carry out drug transactions. It also noted that although the calls already intercepted made

it clear that drug transactions were going forward, it was still unclear at what locations these

transactions would take place and with what people. Thus, the district court did not commit

clear error in finding probable cause for the extension.


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II. Unredacted Affidavit from Rice

       Last, Sims contends the district court erred by refusing to enter an order compelling

the government to provide an unredacted affidavit that was submitted in United States v.

Rice, No. 3:04-CR-83-R. Sims argues that this information was necessary for him to make

the showing required to suppress the wiretap and/or have a Franks hearing. This request has

no basis in any discovery rule. Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 16(a)(1)(E)(i) makes

documents discoverable that would be material to preparing a defense. Sims has made no

such showing that this affidavit would be material. The Rice affidavit was not incorporated

by reference in the affidavits in Sims’s case, nor were any of the intercepted communications

obtained from the Rice case included. Sims merely states that he should be able to see it

because he was a target in that investigation. As the district court found, Sims merely

“proposed a series of generalities based upon an unsubstantiated possibility.” The district

court conducted an in camera review of the unredacted affidavit and found nothing in it that

was material to Sims’s arguments. Given these facts, it cannot be said that the district court

abused its discretion.

                                      CONCLUSION

       For these reasons, we AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.




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