Affidavit Writing Made Easy:
Create an Outstanding Warrant Application Every Time
By Michelle M. Heldmyer
Attorney-Advisor (Instructor), FLETC ALG
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Even for the most experienced law enforcement officers, writing an
affidavit can be a daunting task. Ensuring your affidavit is legally
sufficient, organized, easy to read, and even interesting, is
challenging in the best of circumstances. The undertaking is often
compounded by time constraints and the demands of prosecutors
and judges. But with simple guidelines and a few easily accessible
tools, every prospective affiant can create an impressive warrant
application.
The Basics
Every search and arrest warrant application is governed by rules.
The primary rule is found in the Fourth Amendment to the U.S.
Constitution: each warrant requires probable cause, supported by
oath or affirmation, and particularity. More specific rules governing
warrants are located within each jurisdictions’ rules of criminal
procedure. Affiants need to be familiar with those rules, as they
govern every stage of the process, from content to issuance to
service of warrants.
To satisfy Constitutional and procedural requirements, warrant
applications are accompanied by affidavits, designed to satisfy the
court that the evidence in the case is sufficient to establish
probable cause. The affiant swears or affirms the provided
information is true and correct. Affidavits can, and usually do,
contain hearsay information, because generally the rules of
evidence do not apply. They can, and usually do, contain supportive
information from multiple sources, including other officers and
agents, documents, forensic examinations, expert analysis,
witnesses, victims, and the affiant’s training and experience.
Affidavits do not need to contain all information known by the
affiant they need only reach the level of probable cause to support
the request. Probable cause only requires a fair probability, given all
the facts and circumstances provided in the affidavit, along with the
training and experience of those contributing to the affidavit, that
evidence will be found (for a search warrant) or the subject
committed a crime (for an arrest warrant).
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Every request for a warrant is made in furtherance of a criminal
case, which means criminal statutes are involved. Because an
affidavit must contain proof of the violation of at least one
particular statute, knowledge of that statute is imperative. Do not
assume knowledge of what the statute says. Read it.
After reading the statute, the affiant will need to know its elements.
The best source of this information is the criminal jury instructions
book in your jurisdiction. Most are available online. They are
written plainly, for an audience with no legal experience, and are
easy to understand. More importantly, the elements specified in the
jury instructions tells the affiant what evidence is relevant and
necessary to support a finding of probable cause.
Building the Affidavit
Having identified your offense elements and verified you have
enough evidence in support of each and every element to obtain a
warrant, outline the affidavit. Arrest warrant affidavits are
commonly more concise and less detailed than search warrant
affidavits because they are usually followed by an additional
probable cause finding, like a preliminary hearing or grand jury
presentment. But both types of affidavits require the affiant to
establish probable cause, so the basic purpose and structure are
the same.
Each paragraph should be numbered and the document formatted
to your court’s specifications, if any. A solid basic structure can
look like this:
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Illinois v. Gates, 462 US 213 (1983)
1. Affiant’s name, title, experience, jurisdictional authority.
Emphasize training, experience and knowledge relevant to the
type of crime named in the warrant. Remember, training and
experience add to probable cause.
2. Statutory violations involved in investigation and other relevant
legal citations (i.e., definition statutes, regulations, authority).
3. Statement of purpose of affidavit. “This application is
submitted in support of my request for the issuance of a
search warrant for the residence located at 1234 Main Street,
Anytown, State.”
4. Overview/summary of investigation. The more complex the
investigation, the more important this “executive summary”
section becomes.
5. Statement of probable cause. “This affidavit establishes
probable cause to believe evidence of controlled substance
distribution, in violation of 21 USC 841(a)(1)&(b), will be found
at the residence located at 1234 Main Street, Anytown, State
or “there is probable cause to believe James Blow committed
the offense of controlled substance distribution, in violation
of…”
6. Statement of limited presentation of facts. “This affidavit does
not include all of the facts known to me, but only those facts
relevant and sufficient to establish probable cause.”
7. Definition section, if necessary. Include definitions if you need
to use special terminology in the affidavit.
8. Facts, to include support for each and every element of the
offense or item to be seized (addressed next).
9. Conclusion. Tie the facts together, and ask for what you want.
Much of the content of most affidavits is standard (“boilerplate”)
language and can be reused in multiple affidavits. For example,
affiants can create one basic paragraph about themselves and their
training, experience, and jurisdictional authority, then simply tailor
it for each case. Also, certain types of affidavits should contain
specialized information which can be taken from other similar
affidavits. Computer searches, child pornography investigations,
and complex fraud cases, for instance, contain established
language which the affiant can obtain and insert into the affidavit.
The prosecutor will have access to much of this standard language.
The Department of Justice (DOJ) is another resource. The
Computer Crimes and Intellectual Property (CCIPS) and Child
Exploitation and Obscenity (CEOS) Sections of the DOJ, along with
several other special DOJ sections, can provide advice and warrant
language.
The Facts Section
Armed with knowledge of the applicable statutes and an outline of
the affidavit, build the facts section. Most are written
chronologically, but this style is not required if another is more
effective. Background information offered prior to the pertinent facts
can be helpful for context, but less is better. Do not presume
knowledge of any fact or technical subject, and even some legal
issues should be spelled out clearly.
If you have exculpatory information or information discrediting any
of your sources of facts, consult with the prosecutor about whether
to include it in the affidavit.
Facts included in an affidavit must be attributed to their source.
The court must determine the credibility of the information, and
cannot do so without knowing from where it came. If using
informants, names can be withheld, but information about their
credibility and the basis of their knowledge is important. Also, if you
are cutting and pastingfrom other reports, proofread carefully to
smooth out transitions and to remove repetitive or sensitive
information.
Active voice is usually preferred over passive voice. Say, “Officer
Jones interviewed witness Cheryl Adams” rather than, “Cheryl
Adams was interviewed by Officer Jones.”
The use of the term “Your Affiant” to refer to the writer is common
but archaic. Consider the simpler version; just call yourself “I
instead.
Certain types of information should be avoided in the facts section:
1. Discredited information. If information or its source has been
found to be unreliable, do not include it.
2. Argument. Affiants should appear objective throughout the fact
section.
3. Conclusory statements. Avoid references such as, “we
investigated, and determined this…” or “a confrontation
occurred and a struggle ensued.” Include factual descriptions
and attribution instead: “According to witness Smith, Jones
ran toward Harris and demanded money. Immediately
thereafter, Harris grabbed Jones’ arm and pulled Jones to the
ground.”
4. Repetitive statements. Say it once and move on.
5. Police jargon. For example, avoid use of military time or terms
like “BOLO.”
6. Technical terminology. If you must use it, define it accurately.
7. PII. Personally identifiable information (“PII”) could potentially
become part of the public record, so avoid it if possible. Courts
are becoming accustomed to references such as “year of birth
1985” or “date of birth x/x/1985.” If PII must be used, be
prepared to redact it prior to any disclosure of the affidavit.
Courts usually have redaction procedures in place.
Conclusion
Writing an affidavit need not be difficult. Once you have read the
statutes and rules, and become familiar with all the facts of the
case, the pieces will fall into place. Get organized, find time to write
uninterrupted and get to work. Remember your best resource is
always your prosecutor.
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Ms. Heldmyer has been a Legal Instructor at FLETC Artesia for 2 years. Before joining FLETC,
she served 26 years as an Assistant United States Attorney in Colorado and Florida.