OPINION
Appellant Livio Ramirez appeals his conviction for interference with a police officer making a lawful arrest, Utah Code Ann. § 76-8-305 (1990), a class B misdemeanor. We affirm.
BACKGROUND
At approximately 2 a.m. on May 19,1990, police officers Rowley and Bigelow, on patrol, received a radio call to back up Officer Smith, who was having trouble with “a drunk” near Trolley Square in Salt Lake City. En route to the scene, the officers received a second call to help Officer Smith, asking them to speed up their response. Based on his nineteen years of police experience, Officer Rowley had found that calls to hasten a backup response usually indicated that the on-scene officer was being assaulted or that other serious problems were developing.
Arriving at the scene, Officers Rowley and Bigelow saw appellant and his brother fleeing on foot, pursued by Officer Smith. Appellant’s brother fell down, and was ap
Appellant ran into a nearby house, and Officer Rowley followed. From the front room of the home, Rowley saw appellant in the kitchen doorway, a small, vigorously barking dog at his side. Officer Rowley attempted to apprehend appellant, and a melee ensued among appellant, the officer, and the now-frenzied canine. Another officer arrived and helped subdue appellant and chase the dog out of the house.
When the fur stopped flying, it became evident that appellant had been chased into his own home. It also became evident that, as between appellant and his brother, the latter had been the main reason for the backup calls, because he had thrown a street repair barricade through the window of Officer Smith’s car. In fact, appellant’s role in the difficulties preceding the arrival of the backup officers appears to have been that of a peacemaker, albeit a noisy one, attempting to stop a fight between his brother and another individual.
Appellant’s conviction of interference with a peace officer making a lawful arrest was based entirely on the physical resistance, raised by appellant and his dog, to the in-home arrest. Apparently, no charges against appellant arose from his part in the original disturbance. On appeal, he argues that the warrantless police entry into his home was illegal under the Utah and the United States Constitutions. Therefore, appellant argues that evidence of his resistance cannot be used against him, or, alternatively, that the jury should have been instructed that he was lawfully entitled to resist the illegal police entry into his home.
FOURTH AMENDMENT
We begin with an examination of the applicable standards under the fourth amendment to the United States Constitution. Under that provision, “[warrantless searches and seizures are per se unreasonable unless exigent circumstances require action before a warrant can be obtained.”
State v. Christensen,
Under Utah’s codification of search and seizure principles, a warrantless arrest, or seizure of a person, by a peace officer requires probable or “reasonable” cause. Utah Code Ann. § 77-7-2 (1990). The statute also enumerates exigent circumstances related to flight, concealment, and harm, at least one of which must be present to allow a warrantless arrest:
A peace officer ... may, without warrant, arrest a person:
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(3) when he has reasonable cause to believe the person has committed a public offense, and there is reasonable cause for believing the person may:
(a) flee or conceal himself to avoid arrest;
(b) destroy or conceal evidence of the commission of the offense; or
(c) injure another person or damage property belonging to another person.
With respect to a warrantless search, the burden is on the state to show both probable cause and exigent circumstances.
State v. Larocco,
Appellant contends that the State demonstrated neither statutory probable cause for his arrest nor the existence of exigent circumstances to justify chasing him into his home to effect the arrest. We disagree.
With respect to probable cause, appellant stresses his claimed role as peacemaker, as opposed to troublemaker. He points out that he did not throw the barricade at Officer Smith’s car. However, these circumstances have no bearing on whether Officer
Rowley
had probable cause to arrest appellant. Instead, the test
In his position as a backup officer to help manage “a drunk,” Officer Rowley could reasonably believe that Officer Smith was confronted with someone committing a public offense, albeit a minor one. See Utah Code Ann. § 76-9-701 (1990) (intoxication is class C misdemeanor). When the backup call was repeated, Officer Rowley could reasonably infer that the. situation had become more urgent, probably involving a more serious offense. Upon arriving at the scene and seeing Officer Smith in pursuit of two individuals, it was then reasonable for Officer Rowley to further infer that those individuals were the subject of the backup call, and were being pursued because they were believed to have committed an offense. Therefore, Officer Rowley was justified in believing that appellant had committed a public offense. Coupled with the fact that appellant was fleeing when observed, Rowley was authorized to arrest him under Utah Code Ann. § 77-7-2(3)(a). 1
Exigent circumstances also justified Officer Rowley’s entry into appellant’s home to effect the arrest. Specifically, Rowley entered the home in hot pursuit of appellant, only a few seconds behind him.
The hot pursuit exception to the warrant requirement rests in part upon the principle that a criminal suspect may not defeat a proper arrest simply by retreating into the home ahead of pursuing police.
See United States v. Santana,
Appellant, citing
Welsh v. Wisconsin,
Appellant’s JEeM-based argument also relies heavily on his assertion that he could not have been suspected of anything more than a minor offense. This assertion, how
Additionally, Officer Rowley could not be certain that the house into which the chase led was appellant’s residence. Compare
Welsh,
The evidence presented by the State showed a situation that was developing too rapidly for Officer Rowley to fully assess it, including a hot pursuit already in progress when he arrived on the scene. The situation demanded quick action, and did not allow time to procure a warrant. Therefore, we hold that the State carried its burden of showing that both probable cause to arrest and exigent circumstances existed, justifying the warrantless in-home arrest of appellant under the fourth amendment. 4
ARTICLE I, SECTION 14
Citing
State v. Larocco,
In
Larocco,
a court plurality, questioning the federal theory of a “diminished expectation of privacy” in one’s automobile, held that warrantless, probable cause automobile searches are permitted under article I, section 14 only upon a showing of exigent circumstances requiring action before a warrant could be obtained. The only exigent circumstances deemed acceptable to justify such searches, the plurality held, would be the traditional concerns of safety or of preventing the destruction of evidence.
The key distinguishing feature of Laroc-co from the present situation is that in Larocco, police officers were dealing with a relatively static situation. The searched automobile, believed stolen, had been parked in the same location for roughly a week after police discovered it, and there was no sign that the suspected thief had been alerted to police interest in the automobile. Id. at 470-71. Thus neither a safety concern nor a risk of evidence loss existed to justify the warrantless search.
Here, however, Officer Rowley encountered a rapidly developing, dynamic situation, complete with fleeing suspects, in response to a colleague’s urgent call for backup. While he could not be certain that immediate threats to safety existed, neither could he assume that such threats were absent. There was no way to immediately know, for example, whether appellant was intruding into someone else’s home where he might threaten the occupants, or whether he was entering his own home to obtain a weapon. Similarly, it could not be known whether important evidence might be lost
CONCLUSION
Because we have determined that the pursuit of appellant into his home was not illegal under the Utah and federal constitutions, we need not consider the remedies he proposes for the entry into his home. We stress, however, that under the particular facts of this case, the warrantless entry into a private dwelling is justified.
See Welsh v. Wisconsin,
GARFF and JACKSON, JJ., concur.
Notes
. We do not hold that flight from police officers, by itself, can justify the arrest or detention of an individual. This issue was left unresolved in
California v. Hodari D.,
— U.S. -,
We also note that under the unusual facts of this case, it may be that Officer Smith knew that appellant had committed no offense in his presence, and therefore had no cause to arrest him. However, Officer Rowley, arriving in the middle of a rapidly changing situation, had no opportunity to learn that appellant may have committed no offense, and had to "read” the situation as he saw it.
. The Utah Supreme Court has upheld a war-rantless arrest on private property for class B misdemeanors on the basis of a hot pursuit.
State v. Hamilton,
. Although Officer Rowley testified only that he suspected an assault on an officer, which is by itself a class A misdemeanor, Utah Code Ann. § 76-5-102.4 (1990), it would not have been unreasonable to suspect aggravated assault, Utah Code Ann. § 76-5-103, a third degree felony, or some other felony.
Because we decide that the warrantless home entry was justified on the basis of probable cause that appellant had committed an offense, we do not address the question of whether such
home entry might be valid where an officer, acting under no more than reasonable suspicion, seeks to detain and question an individual. See Utah Code Ann. § 77-7-15 (1990) (authorizing police to stop individuals in "public places” based on reasonable suspicion).
.
See State v. Gardiner,
