The Aguilar–Spinelli test was a judicial guideline set down by the U.S. Supreme Court for evaluating the validity of a search warrant based on information provided by a confidential informant or an anonymous tip. The Supreme Court abandoned the Aguilar–Spinelli test in Illinois v. Gates, 462 U.S. 213 (1983), in favor of a rule that evaluates the reliability of the information under the "totality of the circumstances." However, Alaska, Massachusetts, New York, Tennessee, Vermont, and Washington have retained the Aguilar–Spinelli test, based on their own state constitutions.
The two "prongs" of the test are that, when law enforcement seeks a search warrant and a magistrate signs a warrant:
This information provided to a magistrate will allow the magistrate to make an independent evaluation of the probable cause that a crime has been or will be committed.
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According to the Fourth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution:
Historically in the United States, if the police made an illegal search and seizure of evidence, the evidence, once obtained, could often be used against a defendant in a criminal trial regardless of its illegality.
By a unanimous decision in the case of Weeks v. United States, 232 U.S. 383 (1914),[2] the Supreme Court created the "exclusionary rule." This rule declared that, in most circumstances, evidence obtained through an illegal search and seizure could not be used as admissible evidence in a criminal trial. (This decision created the rule only on the federal level. It was not until Mapp v. Ohio, 367 U.S. 643 (1961),[3] that the exclusionary rule was held to be binding on the states.)
Subsequently, the defense in many criminal trials attempted to prove that a search warrant was invalid, thus making the search illegal and hence the evidence obtained through the search inadmissible in the trial. However, there were no hard guidelines defining the legality of a search warrant and it could be difficult for a judge to decide upon a warrant’s validity.
In order to obtain a search warrant in the United States, a law officer must appear before a judge or magistrate and swear or affirm that he has probable cause to believe that a crime has been committed. The officer is required to present his evidence to the magistrate and present an affidavit to the magistrate, setting forth his evidence. "An affidavit must provide the magistrate with a substantial basis for determining the existence of probable cause." In other words, the law officer must present his evidence, not merely his conclusions. "Sufficient information must be presented to the magistrate to allow that official to determine probable cause; his action cannot be a mere ratification of the bare conclusions of others."[4]
In Johnson v. United States, 333 U.S. 10 (1948), the Court said:
In Aguilar v. Texas, 378 U.S. 108 (1964), the Court said:
In Spinelli v. United States, 393 U.S. 410 (1969), the Court went further by requiring that a magistrate must be informed of the "underlying circumstances from which the informant had concluded" that a crime had been committed.[1]
In Illinois v. Gates, 462 U.S. 213 (1983), the Supreme Court explicitly abandoned the two-pronged rule in favor of the totality of the circumstances rule. According to the opinion, written by Justice William Rehnquist:
Note that even though the Gates decision abandoned the "two-pronged test" that was implied by the Spinelli decision, it did not expressly overturn the Spinelli decision itself. More importantly, it did not overrule the Aguilar decision at all.
Individual states can provide more rights under their own laws than the Federal Constitution requires. At least four states — Alaska,[SL 1] Massachusetts,[SL 2] New York,[SL 3] and Tennessee,[SL 4] — have rejected the Gates rationale and have retained the two-prong Aguilar–Spinelli test on independent state law grounds.