Following his conviction
1
оn an indictment charging unlawful possession of marihuana, a class D controlled substance, with intent to distribute (G. L. c. 94C, § 32, inserted by St. 1971, c. 1071, § 1), Michael A. Huff
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man appealed.
2
Huffman assigned as error an evidentiary ruling by the triаl judge, and the denial of his motion to suppress the evidence seized by the police. The Appeals Court reversed on the evidentiary issue
3
(Commonwealth
v.
Huffman,
The Appeals Court concisely summarized the facts as follows. “At the hearing on the motion, Officer Del Rosso testified that аbout 9:40 p.m., on September 26, 1979, accompanied by a factory custodian, he was searching the third floor of a factory for intruders. The factory was about forty feet distant (across a thirty-two foot street) from the ‘three-decker’ apartment house in which, on the third floor, Huffman lived as a tenant. The officer’s attention was attracted by lighted windows, without curtains or shades. Through the windows (before he called for assistance) he observed for an appreciable time Huffman and two other men taking a green herb from one bag and putting it into numerous other smaller bags. Officer Del Rosso called for police assistance and then obtained binoculars . . . from his policе cruiser. He was joined by several other officers. With them he observed Huffman and the other men through two different windows for about fifteen minutes more. The officers went to the аpartment house, found ‘the first door downstairs’ open and the hall door unlocked. They proceeded to the third floor landing. Huffman’s apartment
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door was partially аjar (about five or six inches), music was ‘blaring,’ and there was a strong odor [of] marihuana. Through the open door he observed one of the men ‘still bagging’ the green herb. The officers entered and found the three men, previously observed from the factory, sitting or standing near a table two or three feet from the windows. On the table were sixteen ‘baggies’ containing the green herb and fifteen hand-rolled cigarettes strewn around the table. The herb on analysis proved to be marihuana. No attempt was made to obtаin a search or arrest warrant. Officer Del Rosso’s cruiser and the other officers’ cruisers were parked in an alley out of sight of the apartment building.”
Commonwealth
v.
Huffman,
The Appeаls Court ruled that in the absence of exigent circumstances “any nonconsensual entry through the partly open door of Huffman’s apartment without a warrant [is proscribеd], even though the officers had knowledge that a crime was probably there still in progress.”
Id.
at 188. See
Payton
v.
New York,
We turn to the Commonwealth’s claim that exigent circumstances were present. The burden is on the Commonwealth “to demonstrate that еxigency.”
Id.
See
Commonwealth
v.
Hall,
The Commonwealth’s claim that there were exigent circumstances excusing the lack of a warrant is not supported by the record. The Commonwealth did not offer any evidence that the defendant was armed, that he might flee, or even that the defendant was aware of the officers’ presence. 6 It does not appear in the record that there was any threat that the evidence would soon be removed from the premises. Furthеr, Officer Del Rosso “imagine[d] ” that there was a clerk on duty at the District Court for the Central Worcester Division on that evening, yet the Commonwealth did not offer any evidencе as to the time it would take to get a warrant, or indicate that it would be impractical to get one.
The Commonwealth argues that exigent circumstances existed bеcause of the potential destruction of the evidence, a well-established exception to the warrant requirement. See
Commonwealth
v.
Forde,
367 Mass, at 800;
Common
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wealth
v.
Hall,
366 Mass, at 801-802. Comment, Warrantless Residеntial Searches to Prevent the Destruction of Evidence: A Need for Strict Standards, 70 J. Crim. L. & Criminology 255 (1979). However, the question whether exigent circumstances exist depends upon аn evaluation of all the circumstances. “ [I]n the cases held ‘exigent’ a quite specific threat has been found: ‘based
on
the surrounding circumstances or the information at hand’ it is reasonably concluded that ‘the evidence will be destroyed or removed before . . . [the police] can secure a search warrant.’”
7
Commonwealth
v.
Hall,
366 Mass, at 802, quoting from
United States
v.
Rubin,
In this case, the Commonwealth did not introduce evidence that there was a specific threat that the marihuana wаs about to be destroyed or that to obtain a warrant would have thwarted the arrest. Moreover, “[a] number of police officers were on hand; they could readily have maintained a presence to prevent suspicious access to the premises until a warrant could be obtained.”
Commonwealth
v.
Hall,
366 Mass, at 803. See, especially,
id.
at 803 n.16; Note, Police Practicе and the Threatened Destruction of Tangible Evidence, 84 Harv. L. Rev. 1465, 1474-1475 (1971). The Commonwealth did not show the existence of an exigency.
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We cannot speculate or go outside of the record to justify the warrantless entry into a private residence. Cf.
Commonwealth
v.
Ferguson,
Since the Commonwealth has failed to meet its burden of justifying the warrantless entry the motion to suрpress should have been allowed. Commonwealth v. Forde, 367 Mass, at 806. The judgment is reversed and the verdict set aside. The order of the trial judge denying the motion to suppress is reversed and the cаse remanded to the District Court for the Central Worcester Division six-man jury session for further proceedings.
So ordered.
Notes
Huffman was fined $625, a sentence later suspended.
The case was tried in the six-member jury session of the District Court for the Central Worcester Division.
The Appeals Court reversed the judgment of the District Court on the ground that the judge should have allowed the defendant to testify as to his intentions with respect to the marihuana seized.
Commonwealth
v.
Huffman,
Certain crimes observed by officеrs create their own exigent circumstances. For example, should an officer observe a murder or other violent disturbance in progress, exigent circumstancеs would be apparent. The crime in this case, however, is one of nonviolence.
In the circumstances of this case there is no difference between the рrinciples governing search warrants and arrest warrants. “The simple language of the [Fourth] Amendment applies equally to seizures of persons and to seizures of prоperty. . . . [T]he ‘physical entry of the home is the chief evil against which the wording of the Fourth Amendment is directed.’
United States
v.
United States Dist. Court [for the E. Dist. of Mich.],
Exigent circumstances may arise if a defendant becomes aware, or is certain to become aware, of an officer’s presence. Compare
Benefield
v.
State,
In
United States
v.
Davis,
In contrast, the Commonwealth, here, offered no evidence that the defendant planned an immediate distribution of the marihuana.
