This appeal requires that we determine whether there existed circumstances that justified police officers’ warrantless entry into the defendant’s apartment when the police responded to a call regarding a domestic disturbance. We conclude that the “exigent circumstances” exception to the Fourth Amendment’s warrant requirement applies here. Accordingly, we affirm the district court’s denial of the defendant’s motiоn to suppress the evidence acquired by police following their entry,
FACTS
Joel Sailas was charged with possession of a controlled substance, methamphetamine, I.C. § 37-2732(c). He filed a motion to suppress evidenсe of the methamphetamine on the ground that this evidence was the product of police officers’ warrantless entry into Sailas’s home in violation of constitutional guarantees against unreasonable seаrches. According to evidence presented at the suppression hearing, the following events led to police officers’ discovery of the drug in Sailas’s possession.
Officer Becky Thomas of the Post Falls Policе Department responded to a report of a domestic disturbance at the apartment where Sailas and his girlfriend, Brenda Desjardins, were residing. On approaching the apartment building, Thomas could hear yelling and screaming coming from the apartment. Thomas knocked on the door, and Desjardins answered. When Desjardins opened the door, she stepped back and gestured with her hand in a manner that Thomas interprets ed to be an invitation to enter. Desjardins had blood on her nose and hands. From Officer Thomas’s vantage point at the open door, she could see Sailas and a small child inside the apartment. Desjardins said that she and Sailas had bеen fighting, that everything was now fine, that she had asked Sailas to leave, and that she did not need the assistance of the police. Nevertheless, Thomas entered the apartment and spoke to Sailas, who had cоntinued shouting at Desjardins. She directed Sailas to sit down at a table and calm down. Officer Thomas testified that her entry was prompted by concerns about the safety of both herself and the occupants of the apartment.
One to two minutes later Sergeant H. Patrick Kenner, also a Post Falls police officer, arrived on the scene as backup for Thomas. The argument between Sailas and Desjardins was continuing, and as Kenner approached the apartment, he could hear Sailas shouting and making threats of harm against Desjardins. The apartment door was ajar, and *434 when Kenner knocked, Officer Thomas opened the door farther to admit him.
Thomas asked Sailas to produce his driver’s license for identification. When he did so, Kenner could see in Sailas’s wallet a bindle of the type used for carrying illegal narcotics. After Sailas attempted to dump the contents of the bindle on the floor, he was arrested on suspicion of possession of a controlled substance. The contents of the bindle were later identified to be methamphetamine.
On Sailas’s subsequent motion tо suppress, he argued that Officer Thomas’s warrantless entry into his apartment violated his Fourth Amendment right to be free from unreasonable searches and seizures. 1 He also contends that Sergeant Kenner’s entry was “tainted” because it occurred as a result of the earlier unlawful conduct of Thomas. The district court found, however, that Desjardins’ gesture when she opened the door impliedly invited Thomas to enter the apartment and that Dеsjardins thereby consented to the entry. The court also held that even if consent was not given, exigent circumstances justified the officers’ entry to prevent violence. Sailas’s motion to suppress was denied accordingly.
ANALYSIS
In an appeal from the denial of a motion to suppress evidence, we accept the district court’s factual findings unless they are clearly erroneous. However, we independently evaluate whеther constitutional requirements have been satisfied in light of facts found.
State v. Weber,
The portion of the Fourth Amendment that is pertinent to Sailas’s claim in this appeal states, “The right of the people to be secure in their ... houses, ... аgainst unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated____” That language, the United States Supreme Court has said, establishes that, “the right of a man to retreat into his own home and there be free from unreasonable governmental intrusion” stands at “the very core” of the Fourth Amendment.
Payton v. New York,
There exists an exception to the warrant requirement, however, for entries that are necessitated by “exigent circumstances.”
Michigan v. Tyler,
The State posits thаt the requisite compelling need was present here because there was a risk of further injury to Desjardins or injury to the child if the police waited to secure a warrant before entering Sailas’s apartment. The State’s point is well taken. The United States Supreme Court has indi
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cated that exigent circumstances justifying a warrantless entry include “the risk of danger to the police or to other persons inside or outside the dwelling.”
Minnesota v. Olson,
Sailas maintains, however, thаt any perception of imminent danger, which Officer Thomas might otherwise have reasonably held, was dispelled when Desjardins said that “everything is fine” and indicated that she did not need help from the police. We are not persuaded, however, that the officer was obligated to take Desjardins’ statements at face value. When a law enforcement officer has interrupted a domestic dispute that has already grown violent, the оfficer can reasonably suspect that such a statement by an injured victim is prompted by duress or fear of retaliation from the perpetrator who is still present.
We observe also that the intrusiveness of the police officers’ conduct was limited. They took only such action as was necessary to calm the combatants, ascertain their identity and prevent further physical harm. 3 Neither officer acted outside the scope of the justification for the entry.
Accordingly, we are in agreement with the district court’s determination that the circumstances known to Officer Thomas immediately before she entered the apartment — a violent fight in progress with one participant already having been injured, the presence of a small child who could be victimized, and the consequent risk of bodily harm to one or more occupants of the apartment if the pоlice did not intervene — constituted an exigent circumstance that justified Thomas’s entry for the purpose of preventing further violence. 4
*436 The order of the district court denying Sailas’s motion to suppress evidence is affirmed.
Notes
. In his motion to suppress and in this appeal, Sailas has invoked the protections of both the Fourth Amendment and Art. I, § 17 of the Idaho Constitution. However, Sailas has made no argument that the Idaho constitutional provision should be interpreted to provide protection broader than that afforded by the Fourth Amendment. Therefore, we do not separately address the Idaho Constitution.
.In
State v. Monroe,
. Sailas does not contest the officers' right to ask that he produсe identification. In
State v. Godwin,
. In cases where police entry of a dwelling was made in order to effectuate an arrest or to prevent the destruction of evidence, it has been stated that the warrantless intrusion could be
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justified only if there existed
both
exigent circumstances
and probable cause.
E.g.,
Welsh,
