Lead Opinion
OPINION OF THE COURT
Defendant appeals from a judgment, entered upon a jury verdict, convicting him of murder in the second degree. He raises issues concerning his warrantless arrest in his home and the seizure of certain items pursuant to a search warrant. Defendant contends that the initial entry into his home was illegal and that the police exploited the illegality in obtaining his statement and in applying for the search warrant. Consequently, he argues, the suppression court committed reversible error in refusing to suppress the statement and the items seized pursuant to the search warrant. We disagree.
I
The testimony at the suppression hearing shows that the police first learned about the murder of John Borek from a
The police went to the sewer described by Murray where, at 10:30 p.m., they found Borek’s body. Murray’s statement was transcribed and sworn to at 11:45 p.m., and between 12:30 and 12:45 a.m. the Chief of the Homicide Bureau directed the police to arrest defendant. The Chief decided to have defendant arrested at his apartment without a warrant because, in view of Murray’s statement that defendant intended to leave town, the hour of the night, and the unavailability of a Judge, there was no time to obtain a warrant. Following the Chiefs instructions, the police went to defendant’s apartment and knocked on the door. Although they heard movement inside, there was no response, so the officers tried to kick in the door and then had firemen pry it open. Inside they found defendant hiding under a bed and when he emerged, he shouted, "I didn’t kill him, Timmy Murray did.”
After arresting defendant, one of the officers looked in defendant’s clothes closet and noticed a knapsack. The officer also picked up a jacket which was hanging on the back of the bedroom door.
The next morning, the Chief directed a police officer to obtain a warrant to search defendant’s apartment. The only information the officer had concerning the crime was Mur
At trial, defendant’s girlfriend corroborated Murray’s testimony that defendant, while on top of Borek, stabbed him in the thigh and that defendant, Murray, and Borek left the area of the apartment together. The police testified that they found Borek’s clothes in the reservoir and on top of the clothes, the blade of a knife. Defendant was known to carry a knife in a case attached to his belt.
II
Based upon the testimony at the hearing, the suppression court properly found that the arrest of defendant in his home without a warrant was justified because of exigent circumstances.
Although, absent a warrant, the police may not make a routine arrest within a person’s home, a warrant is unnecessary under "exigent circumstances” (Steagald v United States,
Here, (1) the crime, a savage murder, was grave and violent; (2) the subject was armed with a knife when he committed the murder and there was no reason to believe he would not have
It may be argued that to prevent defendant’s escape, the police should have guarded the premises and waited until morning to obtain a warrant. This argument was found unreasonable in United States v Campbell (581 F2d 22, 26-27, supra), where the court stated: "Moreover, had the officers decided to set up surveillance of the apartments while waiting for a warrant to be issued, they would have risked the possibility of detection by appellants. If appellants had been alerted to the presence of the police, they might well have had sufficient time to dispose of the stolen money and other evidence in their possession. Furthermore, the risk of an armed confrontation would have thus been heightened. To secure a warrant would have required the police and agents to wait at least several more hours until the facts were fully communicated to headquarters, typed in affidavit form, attested to, presented to one of the district’s busy magistrates, and a warrant obtained in due course.”
In Campbell (supra), the court stressed the reasonableness of the police action in waiting to make the arrest until they had fully investigated the crime and obtained clear probable cause. Here, the police acted reasonably in investigating Murray’s accusations by going to the scene of the murder where they found the body and by taking a detailed sworn statement from Murray. Only then did they have clear probable cause to make the arrest.
Ill
Nor was there any basis for suppressing the items seized pursuant to the search warrant. Even if the initial entry were held to be illegal, there was no showing that the search and seizure following the issuance of the warrant was tainted by the illegality. As Judge Jasen wrote in People v Arnau (
The only items of evidence the police obtained from the apartment before they obtained the search warrant were the photographs of the interior of the apartment. These photographs depict no incriminating evidence and were used at the trial only to show the layout of the apartment. Defendant has not suggested that he was in any way prejudiced by their use at trial.
IV
Further, even if defendant’s warrantless arrest were illegal and his statement therefore should have been suppressed, that error would be harmless. The proof that defendant and Murray were together before and during the time that the victim was killed was overwhelming. Under the circumstances, defendant’s only line of defense was to point to Murray as the killer. So viewed, his statement to the police that Murray did it was exculpatory rather than inculpatory. Thus, there was no reasonable possibility that the error might
We have examined the other arguments made in defendant’s brief and in his supplemental pro se brief, and we conclude that they do not warrant reversal. Accordingly, the conviction should be affirmed.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting). We must dissent. In our view, the warrantless entry of the police into defendant’s apartment was in violation of Payton v New York (
The burden of showing the existence of an exigent circumstance rests squarely upon the People (People v Knapp,
If defendant had really intended to flee, he likely would have done so within the 24 hours following the crime. This was not a case in which the police were in hot pursuit of a suspect immediately following a crime (cf. Warden v Hayden,
Even assuming the information of defendant’s intended flight was reliable, however, there was ample time for the police to obtain a warrant. We "must be careful to distinguish between constraints on police conduct which limit effective police enforcement and those constraints which merely make effective police enforcement more burdensome” (People v Spin
Four police officers were sent to defendant’s apartment building to arrest him. One officer watched the front of the building, one officer watched the back of the building and the other two officers knocked on the door to defendant’s apartment. They heard movement inside and tried to kick down the door, without success. The police then called the fire department and the door was pried open with an axe approximately 15 minutes later (cf. People v Green,
The majority’s reliance on People v Gordon (
There is no question here that the crime the police were investigating was a serious one. But the seriousness of the
The 4th Amendment requires that the evaluation of probable cause to arrest a suspect in his home be made, in the first instance, by "a neutral and detached magistrate instead of being judged by the officer engaged in the often competitive enterprise of ferreting out crime” (Johnson v United States,
Doerr, J. P., and Balio, J., concur with Boomer, J.; Green and Pine, JJ., dissent and vote to reverse the judgment, grant defendant’s motion to suppress and grant a new trial in an opinion by Green, J.
Judgment affirmed.
