TN: Three controlled buys in three days is PC

Three controlled buys three days in a row was probable cause for a warrant for defendant’s house. State v. White, 2026 Tenn. Crim. App. LEXIS 95 (Feb. 27, 2026).*

“Here, a review of the affidavit demonstrates that it does contain specific factual averments, specifically that: (i) surveillance was initiated based on information of large-scale drug sales; (ii) agents saw the Defendant leave his residence and go directly to a meeting during which a hand-to-hand drug transaction occurred; (iii) the recipient of the hand-to-hand transaction admitted that she had purchased drugs from the Defendant; and (iv) approximately 21 grams of marijuana were recovered from the recipient’s vehicle. While additional facts establishing a definitive nexus between the Defendant’s residence and his drug distribution activities certainly would have bolstered the affidavit, courts should refrain from ‘second guess[ing] the magistrate who authorized the warrant’ when looking at the affidavit through the lens of the good-faith exception. … Rather, the question is simply ‘whether officers objectively could reasonably believe that there was’ such a nexus between the drug activity and residence.” And here the answer is yes. United States v. Robertson, 2026 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 40354 (W.D. La. Feb. 26, 2026) (emphasis added).*

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