¶ 1. Jennifer Parisi appeals from a judgment of conviction entered after the circuit court denied her motion to suppress evidence of drug
Background
¶ 2. Two of the police officers testified at the suppression hearing related to Parisi's motion. Their relevant, undisputed testimony is as follows.
¶ 3. Officer Derek Sell responded to a complaint of drugs at 1319 Clayton Court, Apartment 108. Sell met with the complainant, who described smelling burnt marijuana related to that apartment approximately an hour before Sell's arrival and also indicated that he had smelled marijuana there several times per week for several months. Sell went into the apartment complex hallway, in the area of Apartment 108, which was on the ground floor. Due to a sinus condition, he could not smell burning marijuana, but he pressed his ear up to the apartment door and heard what sounded like an adult male and adult female conversing. Sell confirmed in his testimony that he was "positive" the voices were coming from Apartment 108. He knocked on the apartment door three separate times, each time announcing that he was a police officer. After he did this, no one answered the door and he "could no longer hear any voices inside."
¶ 4. Sell testified that another officer was positioned "on the outside patio door area." Sell asked that officer to come into the hallway to see if he could smell
¶ 5. Several additional officers arrived on the scene, including an officer with а drug-detecting dog, which alerted to Apartment 108. Believing there were persons in the apartment who were aware police were at the door and out of concern evidence would be destroyed if they waited for a search warrant,
¶ 6. Officer Joseph Framke testified as follows. He arrived at the scene after the drug dog had alerted on Apartment 108. He explained that he had experience with drug investigations, including smelling burning marijuana, and stated that he smelled such an odor in the hallway area outside of that apartment. A collective decision was made to enter the apartment to secure it because the officers believed there were people inside
¶ 7. Parisi was charged with possession of tetrahydrocannabinols with intent to deliver. According to the criminal complaint, Apartment 108 was Parisi's residence and several baggies of marijuana were found throughout the apartment, along with $630 in cash. Parisi moved to suppress the evidence, and after the circuit court denied the motion, she pled no contest. Sentence was withheld and Parisi was placed on probation. She appeals, challenging the circuit court's denial of her motion to suppress.
Discussion
¶ 8. Parisi contends exigent circumstances did not exist to justify the officers' warrantless entry into her apartment. We disagree.
¶ 9. Warrantless entry into a residence is generally prohibited by the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution. State v. Robinson,
¶ 10. Here, as the officers stood outside the apartment door, they were aware marijuana was being burned inside Apartment 108. Our supreme court has held that the smell of burning marijuana gives "rise to a reasonablе belief that the drug — the evidence — was
the possibility of the intentional and organized destruction of the drug by apartment occupants once they were aware of the police рresence outside the door. Marijuana and other drugs are highly destructible .... It is not unreasonable to assume that a drug possessor who knows the police are outside waiting for a warrant would use the delay to get rid of the evidence.
Id., ¶ 26; see also Robinson,
¶ 11. Parisi asserts that "law enforcement did not possess certainty that anyone was situated within Ms. Parisi's apartment." The record indicates otherwise. Although the circuit court did not make a specific finding as to whether Sell did or did not hear individuals speaking in the apartment prior to knocking on the door, the court did find the undisputed testimony of Sell and Framke to be "reasonable and believable." And Sell's testimony was that he heard an adult male and an adult female "talking inside Apartment 108." He further confirmed he was "positive" the vоices were coming from inside of that apartment and this was because he had "had [his] ear pressed up to the door." In addition, two officers smelled the odor of burning marijuana, and
¶ 12. Parisi also contends exigent circumstances did not exist because "neither [officer] testified to hearing any sounds of destruction or so much as the flush of a toilet." The exigent circumstance exception, however, does not require that officers observe actual destruction of evidence taking place before making entry. To state the obvious, once an officer's presence is known and a toilet is flushed, at least some of the evidence has already been disposed. The exception rather requires only that officers have a reasonable belief "that delay in procuring a search warrant would . . . risk destruction of evidence." Hughes,
¶ 14. Parisi appears to also assert that the exigent circumstances exception to the warrant requirement should not apply here because Sell created the exigent circumstances by knocking on the door. This position has been soundly rejected by both our supreme court
¶ 15. Similarly, in Kentucky v. King,
¶ 16. Parisi cites to our decision in State v. Kiekhefer,
¶ 18. Faced with the facts of which the officers were aware when they decided to enter the apartment, "a police officer . . . would reasonably believe that delay in procuring a search warrant would . . . risk destruction of evidence." See Hughes,
By the Court. — Judgment affirmed.
Notes
Sell testified that "[i]t appeared that whoever may have been inside was aware of our presence, and based on past experience ... as time goes by, the ability for suspects to destroy evidence increases."
Parisi does not contest the circuit court's conclusion that the officers had probable cause to believe evidence of a crime would be found in Apartment 108. In light of the uncontested evidence at the suppression hearing, she would not have been likely to succeed had she made such a challenge. See State v. Hughes,
We treat the evidence related to the drug dog's alert to Apartment 108 as valid. We need not analyze potential constitutional issues related to the alert because Parisi has not challenged its validity. We note for completeness, however, that the alert occurred prior to the United States Supreme Court's ruling in Florida v. Jardines,
Although no direct evidence was presented at the suppression hearing of occupants within the apartment escaping out the back patio door, the undisputed evidence was that around the time Sell knocked on the apartment door and announced the police presence, the officer pоsted to watch the patio door left to come into the building, so that the patio door was unobserved for "about one to two minutes." It is also undisputed that prior to the officers subsequently entering this ground floor apartment through the patio door, that door was "slightly ajar."
Although there was nothing unlawful about the previously conversing occupants ceаsing their conversation and not answering the door, as is often the case, lawful actions — or inactions— nonetheless can create an incriminating inference. State v. Robinson,
The State also argues that, even if we did not conclude that exigent circumstances existed, the independent source doctrine should nonetheless preclude suppression of the evidence. See State v. Carroll,
Parisi also argues that evidence obtained from within her residence should be suppressed as "fruit of the poisonous tree." Because we have concluded that the tree from which the fruit was obtained was not poisonous, the evidence is not suppressed.
