411 N.E.2d 837 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1979
Defendants were charged, by various indictments, with promoting prostitution (R. C.
The trial court sustained the motions to suppress on the ground that under the Fourth Amendment and R. C.
"There is no violation of Fourth and Fourteenth Amendment rights where police, in executing a search warrant, comply with the spirit of Section
R. C.
"When * * * executing * * * a search warrant, the officer * * * may break down an outer or inner door or window of a dwelling house or other building, if, after notice of his intention tomake * * * such search, he is refused admittance * * *." (Emphasis added.)
The defendants argued successfully below that inasmuch as police officers broke into the George apartment without first having been refused admittance, the forced entry was illegal under the cited statute, and evidence discovered as a result of the illegality was therefore inadmissible. The state *117
contends that although the statute on its face contains no exception to the requirement of refusal before forced entry is permissible, it has been judicially construed to excuse police from compliance in searches where "exigent circumstances"1
render strict adherence impracticable. The state cites Ker v.California (1963),
The trial court followed Horton, supra, and found that the presence of exigent circumstances in a particular case would permit officers to deviate from strict compliance with R. C.
Our disposition of the issue posed by this appeal is guided by State v. Thomas, unreported, First Appellate District, Nos. C-77650 and C-77651, decided September 13, 1978, in which we held:
"Regardless of the wording of any state statute or common law exceptions thereto, the sole measure of the legality of any search is whether it is `reasonable' under the [Fourth and] Fourteenth Amendment. * * * A state statute may govern the procedure to be used in the execution of a search warrant, but the final determination of whether a particular search is constitutional must be made on the basis of Fourteenth Amendment guarantees. * * * The United States Supreme Court has stated that the reasonableness of a search `is in the first instance a substantive determination to be made by the trial court from the facts and circumstances of the case.' * * * It is, therefore, unnecessary to consider separately whether there has been compliance with R. C.
At the outset, we hold that the trial court correctly readHorton, supra, in declining to adopt a blanket exception to the knock and announce rule codified in R. C.
Turning, then, to an analysis of the particular facts and circumstances here, the trial court found that, although the officers did knock and announce their authority and purpose, not enough time elapsed before they broke into the apartment to permit them to infer that their admittance was refused.3 A sufficient factual fundament for this conclusion existing in the record, we are unable to disturb that finding. This being the case, it then became incumbent on the state to show exigent circumstances justifying the forcible entry. However, a review of the record reveals that it is devoid of any evidence which could establish this justification.
Neither the testimony of the officers nor the search warrant with its supporting affidavit contains facts or circumstances upon which a reasonable belief could be founded that suspected occupants of the apartment would be armed or dangerous, an exigent circumstance which justified an unannounced forcible entry in Horton, supra. Nor was there any factual basis adduced for the officers' stated concern that evidence would be destroyed in this particular case if their entry was delayed. On the other hand, one of the officers who executed the search warrant testified that nothing was heard from inside the apartment before the door was broken down which otherwise arguably could have indicated that the occupants were trying to destroy evidence or flee, and he stated that he had no idea whether or not anyone was even inside.
Coming, then, to the dispositive question of Fourth Amendment reasonableness, Thomas, supra, we conclude that there is no basis in the record or in law to disturb the determination of the trial court that the manner in which this search warrant was executed was unreasonable, and, as a consequence, that evidence seized as a result thereof should be suppressed. *120 Mapp v. Ohio (1961),
Judgment affirmed.
PALMER, P. J., BETTMAN and BLACK, JJ., concur.