659 N.E.2d 1292 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1995
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *492
The charges against Robinson arose in connection with a police investigation into citizens' complaints regarding activity at Robinson's residence. The prosecution offered no testimony at the hearing on the motion to suppress as to the precise nature of the citizens' complaints, but merely established that the investigation into the complaints led two plainclothes police officers, Officer Cathleen Sneed and Officer Kyle Ingram, on the evening of October 30, 1993, to the hallway leading to Robinson's apartment. The officers immediately noticed the odor of burning marijuana emanating from an unknown source. Officer Sneed knocked on Robinson's door and, in response to a request that she identify herself, stated her name, but did not identify herself as a police officer. Robinson opened the door, and the odor of burning marijuana escaped through the opening. When Robinson saw the officers standing at the door with their badges displayed, he attempted to close the door, but was prevented from doing so by Officer Ingram's insertion of a flashlight between the door and the doorframe. The officers then verbally identified themselves as police officers and ordered Robinson to open the door. As the officers struggled to force the door inward and Robinson strained to bar their entry, the officers heard him shout repeatedly, "Get rid of the shit * * *. Police," and observed the actions of a second person in the apartment, who ran from room to room. The officers ultimately succeeded in forcing the door open, and when they entered the apartment, they observed a packaged quantity of marijuana in Robinson's shoe, which had fallen off during their struggle. This quantity of marijuana provided the evidentiary fundament for the officers' complaint charging Robinson with drug abuse, a minor misdemeanor.
The state argues that the trial court erred in granting Robinson's motion to suppress the packaged marijuana because it was properly seized under the plain-view exception to the warrant requirement. We are not persuaded.
The warrantless seizure by a law enforcement officer of an object in plain view does not violate the
The
The
Robinson consented to the officers' initial breach of the threshold of his apartment. When Robinson opened the door following Officer Sneed's identification of herself by name only, he did so freely and voluntarily, under neither duress nor coercion, see Schneckloth v. Bustamonte (1973),
The officers' progress into the apartment was not, however, made in conformity with the
The odor of burning marijuana that escaped through the open door provided probable cause as to the commission within the apartment of minor-misdemeanor drug abuse. However, R.C.
Robinson's attempt to bar the officers' entry and his exhortation to others within the apartment to "[g]et rid of the shit" might also be perceived as providing probable cause as to the commission of the offense of obstructing official business in violation of R.C.
Our analysis thus compels the conclusion that the officers, as they stood before the door to Robinson's apartment, had no probable cause to effect an arrest for any criminal offense. In the absence of probable cause to arrest, neither the plain-view doctrine by itself nor the plain-view doctrine coupled with the search-incident-to-arrest exception to the warrant requirement provided a justification for the officers' subsequent conduct.
However, the United States Supreme Court has found the exigent circumstance premised upon the imminent destruction of evidence of a minor offense to be insufficient to overcome the presumption of unreasonableness that attaches to a warrantless entry. Welsh v. Wisconsin (1984),
Our decision in State v. Reilmann (July 12, 1976), Hamilton App. No. C-75553, unreported, does not compel a contrary result. In Reilmann, a pre-Welsh decision, we held that the exigent circumstance premised on the imminent destruction of evidence justified a warrantless entry to arrest for the crime of marijuana possession under former R.C.
Having thus determined that the officers' warrantless seizure of the marijuana violated the
Judgment affirmed.
HILDEBRANDT, P.J., and SHANNON, J., concur.
RAYMOND E. SHANNON, J., retired, of the First Appellate District, sitting by assignment.