*143 OPINION
By the Court,
In this appeal, we consider whether an emergency reason existed for a warrantless entry into a private residence. In resolving this issue, we bring our standard for emergency home entries into conformity with the recent United States Supreme Court decision in
Brigham City
v.
Stuart,
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
On the afternoon of July 29, 2006, appellant Sean Andrew Hannon and his girlfriend, Lea Robinson, were overheard arguing in their apartment. During the argument, Robinson became emotional, screamed at Hannon, and slammed the bathroom door against the wall.
Having overheard “yelling and screaming [and] thumping against the walls” in Hannon’s apartment, a neighbor called 911 to report a possible domestic disturbance. In response, Officer Eric Friberg and his trainee were dispatched to the scene. Before knocking on Hannon’s door, the officers confirmed with the neighbor what he had overheard.
*144 Although approximately 45 minutes had elapsed since the argument had dissipated, Robinson answered the door red-faced, crying, and breathing hard. As Robinson opened the door, Officer Friberg observed Hannon in the background in a tank top and underwear. He appeared to be flushed and “angry.”
Speaking to Robinson through the cracked door, Officer Friberg explained that he was responding to a possible domestic disturbance and asked if she was injured. Robinson replied no, though she admitted having a verbal argument with Hannon earlier that day. Robinson was then asked whether anyone else was inside and whether they were injured. Robinson answered that nobody was injured and that nobody else was inside except Hannon.
Despite these reassurances, Officer Friberg stated that he “needed to come inside to check everybody’s welfare and make sure everybody was okay.’ ’ He then asked Robinson for permission to enter. Robinson refused to allow the officers to enter and asked if they had a warrant. The officers then sought permission from Hannon. Again, the officers were told that they could not come inside the apartment.
Although he had twice been denied entry, Officer Friberg persisted by “pushfing] the [apartment] door slightly open.” As the officers crossed the unit’s threshold, Hannon ran into the kitchen and threw a dark bag into a cupboard, prompting Officer Friberg to push his way past Robinson into the apartment. According to Officer Friberg, he forcibly entered the apartment, not because of Hannon’s sudden dash to the kitchen, but to protect the safety of its occupants.
Once inside, the officers conducted a protective sweep and observed marijuana and assorted paraphernalia on the living room table and marijuana leavings on the kitchen counter. Based on these observations, Officer Friberg advised his sergeant by phone that he wanted to seek a warrant to search Hannon’s kitchen cupboard.
Having overheard the call, Hannon asked Officer Friberg whether “[y]ou tear up houses when you obtain search warrants?” Concerned with avoiding a full-blown search, Hannon offered to allow the officers to search the cupboard if they would forgo a warrant.
Officer Friberg accepted the offer. After verifying Hannon’s consent, he then recovered a pillowcase-sized plastic bag of marijuana from the kitchen cupboard. Thereafter, Hannon was arrested for the possession of a controlled substance for the purpose of sale.
Following his arrest, Hannon filed a motion to suppress, challenging the reasonableness of the warrantless entry. At the evidentiary hearing, Officer Friberg admitted that “[he] didn’t have evidence” that another occupant may have been inside who needed emergency assistance, he “just had suspicions.”
*145
Nevertheless, applying the emergency home entry standard recently announced in
Brigham City v. Stuart,
DISCUSSION
In this case, the police entered Hannon’s apartment for a single stated purpose — to render emergency aid to any potential third parties inside. Given the entry’s one-dimensional nature, this case deals exclusively with the emergency exception to the warrant requirement. While we defer to the factual findings supporting the district court’s ruling on Hannon’s motion, we review de novo whether the emergency exception justifies the warrantless entry here.
See State v. Lisenbee,
Emergency exception
Warrantless home entries, the chief evil against which the Fourth Amendment protects,
see Payton v. New York,
Unlike “hot pursuit” situations or the need to preserve evidence, warrantless entries for emergency reasons do not require probable cause.
See U.S.
v.
Snipe,
Controlling standard — Brigham City v. Stuart
Although Nevada’s existing two-pronged test for emergency home entries permits courts to consider law enforcement’s subjective motivations, the standard recently announced in
Brigham City
eliminates such a consideration.
Under Nevada’s existing test, an emergency home entry is permissible without a warrant if law enforcement officers (1) reasonably believe that emergency assistance is needed, and (2) lack the “ ‘ “accompanying intent to either arrest or search.” ’ ”
See, e.g., Geary v. State,
To the extent that our caselaw still condones inquiring into law enforcement’s subjective motivations in the context of an emergency home entry, as other courts have done,
see, e.g., U.S. v. Snipe,
Under that standard, a law enforcement officer’s “subjective motivation is irrelevant.”
Id.
at 404. Rather, the reasonableness of an emergency home entry depends on whether “‘the circumstances, viewed
objectively,
justify [the] action,’ ”
id.
(quoting
Scott v. United States,
Officer Friberg lacked an objectively reasonable belief
Applying the
Brigham City
standard, the district court concluded that there was “objective information” to justify the emergency entry into Hannon’s apartment. Even accepting the district court’s factual findings as true,
see Lisenbee,
With respect to this issue, both sides analogize and distinguish this case from
Brigham City,
where officers responded at 3 a.m. to complaints about a loud house party and overheard “ ‘some kind of a [tumultuous] fight’ ” inside.
Here, by contrast, Officer Friberg had noticeably less information than the officers in Brigham. City to support his belief that a third party was endangered inside Hannon’s apartment.
First, unlike
Brigham City,
which involved actual violence as well as the clear threat “that the violence . . . was just beginning,”
id.,
Officer Friberg did not witness, let alone overhear, sounds of an altercation when he arrived. Tellingly, because there was therefore no apparent need for swift action,
see Huffman,
*148 Second, unlike in Brigham City, in which the officers witnessed the attack and the victim spitting blood, although Robinson was crying, Hannon appeared “angry,” and both were flushed and breathing heavily, neither exhibited observable signs of injury. Moreover, when asked by Officer Friberg, both responded that they were unharmed. Thus, even if there was initial reason to believe that Han-non or Robinson may have been injured, Officer Friberg’s concerns should have been allayed after interviewing Hannon and Robinson at the door.
Additionally, in contrast to
Brigham City,
where other party-goers were seen inside and surrounding the house,
Considering the totality of these circumstances, Officer Friberg arrived at a quiet apartment in response to a 911 dispatch call regarding a possible domestic disturbance that — by all accounts— seemed to have already dissipated. Officer Friberg had no reason to believe that Hannon or Robinson had been injured, and had even less reason to believe that Hannon’s apartment may have harbored an unidentified third person in need of emergency assistance.
Given the above, we conclude that Officer Friberg lacked an objectively reasonable basis to believe that there was an immediate need to protect the occupants of Hannon’s apartment, real or suspected. Because the initial warrantless entry into Hannon’s apartment was unlawful, we conclude that the marijuana recovered during the subsequent search was illegally seized.
See Ford
v.
State,
CONCLUSION
Based on the totality of the circumstances, we conclude that the warrantless entry into Hannon’s apartment was not justified by an objectively reasonable belief that there was an immediate need to protect the occupants of Hannon’s apartment. Because no emergency reason existed for forgoing a warrant, we conclude that the district court erred in denying Hannon’s motion to suppress. Accordingly, we reverse the district court’s judgment of conviction.
Notes
NRS 174.035(3) (permitting conditional pleas of nolo contendere in exchange for the right to appeal a pretrial ruling).
While this case was assigned to District Judge Jerome M. Polaha, who accepted Hannon’s change of plea and entered the judgment of conviction in this matter, District Judge Janet Berry heard and decided Hannon’s suppression motion.
