A trial court properly granted a motion to suppress computer equipment containing child pornography that federal agents seized at a man's home using a search warrant with the incorrect address and a confession he later gave to the agents, a federal appeals court has ruled.

Department of Homeland Security agents served a search warrant at defendant Yuri Bershchansky's Brooklyn apartment in January 2011, after agents identified a computer through a peer-to-peer network that contained child pornography.

The search warrant was for Apartment 2 at 2462 Gerritsen Ave., but they entered Apartment 1. There, the agents found Bershchansky, who admitted to them that he possessed child pornography.