*940 Opinion
Defendant was charged by information with one count of possession of cocaine for sale, a violation of Health and Safety Code section 11351. Defendant pled not guilty. Defendant’s motion to suppress evidence pursuant to Penal Code section 1538.5 was denied. Defendant then withdrew his plea and entered a plea of guilty to the count charged. Defendant was sentenced to the middle term of three years. Defendant appeals, contending the trial court improperly denied his motion to suppress.
Facts
On May 21, 1982, at approximately 1 a.m., Riverside County Sheriff’s officers responded to a report from Jim Jacobson that he smelled the odor of ether coming from a neighbor’s residence. When Deputies Hanson and Birney arrived at Jacobson’s residence in a sparsely populated, mountainous, rural area, they smelled a very strong odor of ether. The deputies knew ether was a volatile substance, and that there was a danger of explosion and fire. Because of this danger, the Jacobsons were evacuated by the fire department.
There were three houses in the area of the ether odor. The first house was the Jacobson residence. Deputies Hanson and Birney went up to the second residence to try to determine where the ether odor was coming from. The second house appeared to be vacant, an unoccupied weekend cabin. From the porch or deck of the second house, the officers saw lights at the third house. The deputies returned to their unit and called for a backup deputy. Deputy Jordan arrived in approximately 30 minutes. Deputy Jordan also noticed a strong odor of ether in the area.
The three deputies then made an approach to the third house. They climbed over a chain link fence and walked up to the corner of the house. The smell of ether became stronger, the closer they approached to the house. As the deputies walked toward the side of the house, they could see lights on in the bottom rear portion of the house. Deputy Jordan testified as they came toward the rear portion of the house where the lights were, he could see people inside the residence, and he saw plastic vats with a chemical substance in them on the patio in back of the house. The deputies climbed up on a porch and saw through the windows and the open french doors what appeared to be a vacuum pump. Deputy Jordan could hear the motor running, and he saw more plastic vats with chemicals inside. He saw a number of glass beakers inside the house also. Deputy Hanson knocked on the door, which was slightly ajar, and announced “ ‘Sheriff’s deputy, open the door.’” The subjects inside the residence immediately began run *941 ning. The deputies then immediately went inside to pursue the running subjects. Defendant and two other persons were arrested.
The officers walked through the house, but they did not collect any evidence at that time. They opened the windows to let some fresh air into the house, they turned off one of the burners on the kitchen stove that had been turned on, and they attempted to turn off a wall heater, but they were unable to extinguish the pilot light. The officers were inside the house for about 45 minutes to an hour. Fire department personnel then entered the house to secure it from the risk of fire or explosion. The fire department personnel, however, were also unable to turn off the heater pilot light.
The three sheriff’s deputies and the fire department personnel then awaited the arrival of the crime specific unit. Deputy Ridgway arrived at approximately 7 a.m. He smelled a heavy odor of ether in the area, and he saw a number of plastic barrels outside the residence on the driveway. He waited approximately half an hour for the arrival of two criminalists from the Department of Justice, and the three entered the house in order to turn off the furnace which the sheriff’s deputies and the fire department personnel had been unable to turn off, and to determine whether any ongoing chemical reactions had stopped. Deputy Ridgway and the criminalists were in the house for less than five minutes. They did not take anything from the residence at that time. Deputy Ridgway then made out an affidavit and application for a search warrant. A search warrant was obtained, and served, and a large number of containers and various chemicals were seized.
Contentions
Defendant raises numerous contentions on appeal relating to his motion to suppress evidence. Specifically, defendant contends: (1) Jacobson’s report to the police of the smell of ether from a neighbor’s house was insufficient as an informant’s statement to establish probable cause for the warrant or for the emergency search; (2) the “plain smell” of ether was not an exigent circumstance so as to justify the search; (3) a lawful odor is not probable cause for the issuance of a search warrant; (4) there was no emergency situation which justified the initial warrantless safety search; (5) the officers’ actions in looking through the windows violated defendant’s privacy rights; (6) the failure to comply with the knock notice rules of Penal Code section 844 rendered the evidence inadmissible; (7) the affidavit, the search warrant, and the search pursuant to the warrant were fruits of the initial illegal emergency search; (8) there was no exigent circumstance justifying reentry of the premises; (9) the officers’ conduct was inconsistent with any exigency; and (10) the officers failed to comply with Penal Code section 1531 in executing the search warrant. The People argue that the *942 officers’ conduct was reasonable under the circumstances of this case, and that the warrant was properly issued.
Discussion
Defendant first contends Jacobson’s report of the smell of ether coming from a neighbor’s residence was a mere unsubstantiated hearsay statement of an untested informant, and thus could not supply probable cause for a search or for issuance of a search warrant. Jacobson was a resident in the neighborhood and voluntarily initiated the contact with the sheriff’s department. He was not criminally disposed or implicated, and was not acting for pecuniary or other personal gain. Jacobson was a private citizen informant, and as such, may be considered presumptively reliable.
(People
v.
Ramey
(1976)
Defendant next asserts that “plain smell” is not an exigent circumstance justifying a search, and that lawful odors are not probable cause for issuance of a search warrant. The “plain smell” of ether, defendant argues, is not an exigent circumstance so as to justify a search. The “plain smell” of ether was not the justification for any search in the instant case. It was, however, a circumstance which justified further investigation. The officers knew that ether is a highly volatile and explosive substance. An odor detectible at a distance of two houses away in a wooded and mountainous area could be of a toxic volume near the source (see
People
v.
Dickson
(1983)
The California Supreme Court has rejected the implication that activity which may be consistent with lawful conduct is not subject to governmental intrusion. Conduct which is consistent with either innocent or criminal behavior may justify an investigative detention.
(In re Tony C.
(1978)
We need not address defendant’s specific contentions that the smell of ether alone does not justify a warrantless search, and that the odor of a noncontraband substance does not supply probable cause for issuance of a search warrant. Neither a search nor a search warrant in the instant case was based solely on the evidence of the ether odor. There was other evidence which, when combined with the smell of ether, established both the exigency for the entry and probable cause for the issuance of the search warrant. As the officers approached the residence, the smell of ether became stronger. The officers saw plastic vats with chemicals outside the house, and when they went up on the porch, they saw, plainly visible through the windows, a vacuum pump, more vats with chemicals, and glass beakers. When the sheriff’s deputy knocked on the open door and identified himself, the people inside the house immediately ran. These additional items of evidence justified the entry into the residence, and not the smell of ether alone.
Defendant next contends there was no emergency situation or exigent circumstance which justified the initial warrantless “safety search.” The officers’ entry into the house to arrest the running suspects and to avert an explosion of the chemicals under these circumstances clearly falls under the exigency exception to the warrant requirement. Under the facts of this case there existed “an emergency situation requiring swift action to prevent imminent danger to life or serious damage to property, or to forestall the imminent escape of a suspect or destruction of evidence.”
(People
v.
Ramey, supra,
Defendant relies on
People
v.
Dickson, supra,
The later reentry by Deputy Ridgway and the Department of Justice criminalists was based on a continuing exigency, because of the still-burning furnace. Deputy Ridgway entered with the criminalists to attempt to extin
*945
guish the flames, and to determine whether the dangerous chemical reactions had ceased. The reentry was for a time period of no more than five minutes for these purposes. The instant case is distinguishable from
People
v.
Blackwell
(1983)
Defendant argues the officers had no right to be on the porch and make the observations they made through the windows and open french doors of the residence, citing
Lorenzana
v.
Superior Court
(1973)
Defendant argues the affidavits supporting the search warrant, the search warrant, and the evidence seized pursuant to the search warrant were all the fruit of the initial, assertedly illegal, search. As we have shown, the initial entry to the residence and the reentry by Deputy Ridgway and the criminalists were justified by a continuing exigency. These entries were not unlawful. Thus, the affidavit was properly made, and the warrant was properly issued and executed.
Defendant next contends the officers’ conduct in waiting for backup before approaching the house was inconsistent with a threat of imminent danger and the subjective motivation of preserving lives and property. We reject the intimation in
People
v.
Dickson, supra,
Defendant urges that the officers did not comply with the knock-notice requirements of Penal Code section 844. Defendant asserts that the officers were required to (1) demand entrance; (2) explain the purpose for which they desired admittance; and (3) give the people time to let the officers in. (See
People
v.
Bennetto
(1974)
Disposition
Defendant has failed to establish any ground upon which the motion to suppress was erroneously denied. The judgment is affirmed.
McDaniel, J., and Rickies, J., concurred.
Notes
The Dickson court stated: “Imminence [of danger] connotes a high probability that something will happen and that the event will occur in the very near future. The odds that a narcotics laboratory will explode or catch fire during any given hour—or during a given day or week—are very slim. Otherwise no one would accept the risk of conducting such an operation, [t] If ether were so combustible that its mere presence signalled an imminent explosion, society would not have to worry about PCP and related drugs since all the laboratories would long ago have gone up in smoke or been abandoned.” (Id., at p. 1067.) There was no empirical evidence presented in the trial court in the Dickson case to substantiate this theory, and we doubt that judicial notice may be taken of such “facts.” We note that the illicit reward in terms of the street value of illegally manufactured drugs might well be worth the risk of conducting such an operation. Moreover, even assuming the odds that a narcotics laboratory will explode or catch fire at any given time may be slim, the unpredictability and volatility of the substance enhance rather than diminish the presence of danger. Finally, the risk of explosion or fire is not the only danger to be apprehended. When the odor of ether is in a sufficient concentration to be detected at some distance, as was the case here, there is also a danger, as was noted in the Dickson case (id., at p. 1051), of causing anesthesia or narcosis to any person near the source.
