A single justice of this court, acting under Mass. R. Grim. P. 15 (b) (2),
We learn from the judge’s careful findings of fact, rulings, and conclusions that the narrative starts on Janu *104 ary 13, 1980, when police of district three of the Boston police department (Dorchester section) received information that one Georgiana Sims, also known as Gloria Stokes, an escapee from the Massachusetts Correctional Institution at Framingham, could be found at 160 Westview Street, apartment 403, Dorchester, at approximately 5 p.m. The information about Sims included a warning that she might be carrying a gun and that she was considered dangerous. At the time of her escape she was serving a sentence for manslaughter. The police obtained a description of her. About the time the information concerning Sims was being relayed, the same police officers received a telephone report from a passerby that a man had been stabbed by a woman at the traffic lights not far from Franklin Field, near the intersection of Westview and Stratton Streets.
About 3:50 p.m. the police arrived at the scene of the stabbing. They learned that John L. Bowie, a fireman, had been stabbed and was being transported to Carney Hospital in fire rescue apparatus. Police officers went to Carney Hospital to interview Bowie, but he was then undergoing surgery. Shortly thereafter, Bowie died.
Police Sergeant James Wilson, the patrol supervisor, reported for work at 4 p.m. and was given a briefing on the details of the stabbing as well as on the status of Georgiana Sims. Wilson learned from another police officer that Sims could be found at 4:30 p.m. at 240 Westview Street in apartment 8, which was under lease from the Boston Housing Authority to Marsha Maupin, the defendant’s mother. He directed police officers to meet him there. Wilson, accompanied by six police officers, entered 240 Westview Street and went to apartment 8. He knocked, and the defendant responded by asking, “Who is it?” or words of similar import. Wilson answered, “I am a police officer. We are looking for Georgiana Sims also known as Gloria Stokes. We have a warrant.” The defendant asked, “Who?” Wilson repeated the name. The defendant opened the door and Wilson stepped inside the apartment. He again asked about the escapee and the defendant responded by assuring him that *105 there was no such person living there. Wilson asked, “Can we look around?” The defendant said that he could search after assuring him that only she and her children were there. During the search, one of the police officers observed a shotgun under a bed in a rear bedroom. He seized it and turned it over to Wilson. It was unloaded. The police were in the apartment for seven to ten minutes. Their entry was peaceful. No guns were drawn and the judge found that the defendant “exhibited a calm, cool and collected demeanor.” On leaving, Wilson told the defendant that he wanted to see her mother or her mother’s boyfriend about the shotgun, which he took along with him.
About one hour later, the police at district three received an anonymous telephone call from a female who told them that it was Michele Maupin (defendant’s sister) who had stabbed Bowie, and that she could then be found in apartment 8 at 240 Westview Street.
Wilson again went to the apartment with a number of officers and knocked on the door. At first, there was no response; then the defendant responded. Wilson said: “It is the police; we are looking for a Michele Maupin. She is wanted in connection with a stabbing. We understand she is inside and we want to look around.” The defendant replied: “She isn’t here.” She told the police to go away — that she would not open the door. Thereupon, Wilson told her that he would obtain a search warrant if she persisted in her refusal, that other police officers would be outside the door, that if she were harboring or aiding Michele Maupin, she “could get in trouble” and that if they found Michele Maupin in the apartment on their return, she (defendant) might be charged.
The defendant then agreed to permit them entry and she opened the door. Wilson and the other officers entered peaceably' and looked about the apartment for Michele Maupin but they did not find her. Wilson told the defendant that Michele was wanted for questioning in connection with the stabbing death of Bowie. The defendant’s response to Wilson’s declaration about Bowie was self-incriminating. She “appeared anxious and concerned.” During *106 this visit, the defendant made a telephone call outside the hearing of the police. After a few moments, the police departed.
On the following morning, two detectives returned to the apartment and, without any opposition, they interrogated the defendant concerning the whereabouts of Michele Maupin. Some of her responses were self-incriminating.
The judge concluded that the Commonwealth had carried its burden of proving that the defendant consented to the first search and that the second and third encounters in which the defendant made incriminating statements were free of any taint because her will was not overborne. See
Commonwealth
v.
Antobenedetto,
1.
First visit.
When the defendant opened the door she knew that there was a police officer seeking entry to search for Georgiana Sims. Wilson did not try to dupe her. He said that he had a warrant which he did have, but did not try to mislead her into believing that he had a search warrant or an arrest warrant for her. In this material respect, the defendant’s reliance on
Bumper
v.
North Carolina,
2.
Second visit.
When the police arrived for the second encounter, the defendant was behind a closed door. At the outset, she was reluctant to open the door, but she soon opened it. The judge concluded that the gesture of opening the door was “indicative of demonstrating her election of free choice.” The announcement by Wilson that he would obtain a search warrant was not fatal to her free exercise of volition. See
Commonwealth
v.
Mendes,
No warnings prescribed under
Miranda
v.
Arizona,
3.
Third visit.
The defendant’s argument as to the impropriety of this interrogation is based entirely upon the claimed vices of the first two visits. There was no search on the third visit but there was interrogation. Our conclusion that the first two visits (including the searches and interrogations) were without taint, leads necessarily to our approbation of the third visit. The doctrine of the fruit of the poisonous tree or primary illegality, as it is sometimes denominated, is not implicated if the tree is not poisonous. See
Brown
v.
Illinois,
The order denying the motions to suppress is affirmed.
So ordered.
Notes
In the recent decision of
Steagald
v.
United States,
