THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK, Respondent, v DENNISON STANISLAUS-BLACHE, Appellant.
Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, Second Department
March 20, 2012
940 N.Y.S.2d 136
Ordered that the judgment is affirmed.
In the early morning hours of May 4, 2010, the police in Yonkers received a call that shots had been fired in the vicinity of Van Cortlandt Park Avenue and Rollins Street. When they arrived there, they were informed by a witness that she believed that the shots had come from the basement under her first-floor apartment. Eventually, officers from the Emergency Services Unit (hereinafter ESU) forced open the door to the basement and three men emerged, one of whom was the defendant, but none was armed. The ESU officers went into the basement, which was being used for storage, to make sure that no one else was there and that no one had been harmed. They saw bags of marijuana near the entrance to the basement. When the ESU officers left the basement, a patrol officer was assigned to go in and “secure” it. That officer saw a pistol partially covered by a pile of nails. A detective later saw a spent shell in a garbage pail and found several live rounds in the pocket of a jacket. The defendant, who lived, or at least sometimes stayed, in a second-floor apartment with his girlfriend, later admitted that the gun was his and that he had fired it that night. He was charged with criminal possession of a weapon in the second degree (
Under the “emergency doctrine” (see People v Mitchell, 39 NY2d 173 [1976], cert denied 426 US 953 [1976]), the police may make a warrantless intrusion into a protected area if three prerequisites are met:
“(1) The police must have reasonable grounds to believe that there is an emergency at hand and an immediate need for their assistance for the protection of life or property.
(2) The search must not be primarily motivated by intent to arrest and seize evidence.
(3) There must be some reasonable basis, approximating probable cause, to associate the emergency with the area or place to be searched” (id. at 177-178).
In Brigham City v Stuart (547 US 398, 403 [2006]), however, the United States Supreme Court held that subjective intent of the police is not relevant to determining the reasonableness of police conduct under the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution. Consequently, the second prong of Mitchell is now relevant, if at all, only to claims raised under the New York State Constitution (see
Balkin, J.P., Belen, Hall and Miller, JJ., concur.
