— Judgmеnt of the Supreme Court, New York County (Murray Mogel, J., at trial and suppression hearing), rendered June 1, 1989, convicting defendant of rape in the first degree аnd assault in the second degree, and sentencing him to concurrent, indeterminate terms of imprisonment of from 6 to 12 years and from 2 Vi to 5 years, respеctively, unanimously affirmed.
Just before noon on June 11, 1987, a dishevelled and upset woman ran up to Officer John Gisonno and told him that she had just been rapеd. She led Officer Gisonno and Officer Felix Berrios, who joined them, to an apartment located at 313-315 West 115th Street.
The victim recounted to the offiсers that she had met her assailant, later identified as defendant, at the Salvation Army where she had gone to get help in moving furniture. While there she met dеfendant, who claimed to have a friend with a truck and invited her to his apartment to use the telephone. Someone had to open the lоcked lobby door for them because defendant did not have a key. Defendant did, however, have keys to the apartment door. Once inside, dеfendant put a knife to the victim’s throat and forced her to undress. After defendant forced her to orally sodomize him, he ordered her to
The officers were admitted to the building and found the door to the apartment ajar. They procеeded inside under the belief that the perpetrator might still be inside. After they had checked to make sure that the apartment was empty, the victim еntered, retrieved a jacket and bra and pointed out her tampon in an ashtray. The officers then left. The superintendent of the building told Officer Berrios that the apartment belonged to defendant’s sister.
After the victim was taken to the hospital, two police officers briefly searched thе apartment for the knife used in the assault, but none was found. About two hours after the victim first approached the police, defendant returned to the building by taxi, whereupon he was taken into custody. In the course of executing a search warrant, Officer Berrios recovered the tampоn and an apparently blood-stained quilt.
Defendant bases his standing to challenge the warrantless entry by the police into the apartment on his stаtus as an overnight guest of his sister. An overnight guest has been held to have a legitimate expectation of privacy and, therefore, standing to chаllenge a warrantless search or arrest on the premises (see, People v Murray,
A warrantless search is presumptively unreasоnable except in a narrow range of situations, including exigent circumstances (Payton v New York,
Supreme Court properly determined that the first entry by the police onto the crime scene was justified by the exigency of the circumstances. Rape is a violent and grave crime. The investigating officers had been informed by the victim that the perpetrator was armed with a knife. There was a cleаr showing of probable cause based upon the victim’s statements which were consistent with her dishevelled appearance. The testimony оf the investigating officers shows that they entered the premises in question under the belief that the perpetrator might be in the apartment. The victim testifiеd that, upon leaving the apartment, she dressed in the hallway in fear that defendant was still in the building and might return to the apartment to kill her. Indeed, defendant wаs apprehended within two hours after the initial search while attempting to enter the building and return to the apartment. It is sufficient that the investigating poliсe officers believed that they were entering the perpetrator’s residence, although lacking specific information that he was homе at the time (see, People v Mealer,
In weighing all of these factors, Supreme Court properly fоund that exigent circumstances justified the first warrantless police search of the apartment. The search was conducted in order to loсate the suspect. While the investigating officers did notice the tampon and stained quilt, which lay in plain view, these items were not recovered until а search warrant had been obtained. Defendant confuses the exigent circumstance exception with the emergency exception to the presumption against warrantless search. While the instant case may not warrant a finding of emergency, the facts support a finding of exigеnt circumstances (see, People v Boyd,
Appellant’s assertion that the prosecutor infringеd upon his right to remain silent is unfounded. While it is recognized error to allow testimony regarding a defendant’s invocation of his right to remain silent (People v Von Werne,
Appellant’s claim that he was deprived of a fair trial because the People improperly bolstered their case by introducing five witnesses who repeated the victim’s statement that she had been raped is baseless. The witnesses were properly permitted to testify as to the victim’s "prompt outcry” following the rape incident which consisted solely of the viсtim’s statement that she had been raped. The repetition of that statement by witnesses does not constitute impermissible bolstering (see, People v Rice,
Defendant’s other contentions have been examined and found to be without merit. Concur — Rosenberger, J. P., Ellerin, Wallach, Smith and Rubin, JJ.
