This case is on appeal from the district court’s denial of a petition for writ of habeas corpus. The question presented by the petition is whether under the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments, police without a search or arrest warrant may forcibly enter an apartment being used solely for gambling in order to make arrests for a gambling offense.
At petitioner’s bench trial, evidence seized at the time of his arrest was introduced over objection. He was convicted for gambling and sentenced to 3 months’ confinement in the County Jail and to pay a $300 fine. This misdemeanor conviction was affirmed by the Illinois Supreme Court. People v. Wright,
The petition and the Illinois Supreme Court’s opinion show that on November 24, 1965, Chicago policeman Herman Waller secured a search warrant for the second floor apartment at 1702 North Bissell Street, Chicago, based on information that a numbers game or policy operation was occurring there nightly around 10 p. m. He and four other officers arrived outside the premises at 9:30 p. m. on that date to establish a surveillance of the building. Waller, who had made approximately 300 prior “policy” arrests, noticed that persons reportedly engaged in this illicit operation were entering the first floor apartment. He recognized some of them as policy “runners” whom he had arrested previously. After 35 minutes in front of the apartment building, he moved to a position under the elevated tracks of the Chicago Transit Authority that was one to three feet from a partially covered rear window of the first floor apartment. He could see the heads of the persons inside, could hear an adding machine being operated, and a feminine voice inquiring, “Are all your books in? Who has any short books ? Where is all the money?” He knew that a “short book” referred to the situation where a policy runner does not have enough *1145 money to “clear” his bets on a particular book, and he also knew that adding machines were commonly used to add up the sums of money collected in policy gambling operations.
Aften ten minutes’ observation at the rear window, Waller knocked at the front door of the apartment and announced his office. After the person answering told him to “get lost,” Waller forced his way into the apartment. He proceeded to the kitchen in the back of the apartment where he observed three persons sitting at a table with an adding machine, policy writings, and policy results thereon. Petitioner then yelled “Police” and threw a bag containing $179.35 behind a washing machine. A search of two other persons in the kitchen revealed that they were carrying policy writings and money in their pockets. One of them told Waller, “Okay, you got me. Let’s go,” and the other remarked. “Well you have finally got me.” Petitioner asked Waller, “Well, why don’t you go out and leave this policy alone?”
By now it is well settled that search incident to a lawful arrest is usually permissible without a warrant. Draper v. United States,
Petitioner does not challenge the legality of his arrest under Illinois law. Chapter 38, Section 107-2 permits a police officer to make a warrantless arrest where “[h]e has reasonable grounds to believe that the person is committing or has committed an offense,” including a misdemeanor specified in a municipal ordinance. People of Illinois v. Edge,
Petitioner disputes none of these conclusions. He insists, however, that the entry of the arresting officers violated the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments because Waller lacked a valid warrant. 1 He claims that the Constitution conditions entry into a private building to arrest for a non-violent misdemeanor upon the possession of a valid warrant. We find no such constitutional constriction upon the states.
Justification of a search as incident to an arrest may require examination of the arrest “to determine whether notwithstanding its legality under state law, the method of entering the home
*1146
may offend federal constitutional standards of reasonableness and therefore vitiate the legality of an accompanying search.” Ker v. California,
We find nothing in the cases relied upon by petitioner which casts doubt upon these conclusions. Johnson v. United States,
In McDonald v. United States,
Finally, in Regalado v. California,
Affirmed.
Notes
. The search warrant was quashed because it covered only the second floor apartment.
. The offense with which defendant was charged, though a misdemeanor, was hardly trivial. Moreover, many of those observed entering the building by the police, including petitioner, had prior gambling convictions and were therefore liable to prosecution as felons. Ill.Rev.Stat. ch. 38, § 28-1 (c) (1965).
.
A fortiori,
the use of a warrantless entry would seem to be constitutionally permissible in the ease of proper police announcements. In
Ker,
Justice Clark, writing for himself and three others, concluded that the unannounced entry by means of a pass key was “the legal equivalent of a ‘breaking,’ ” yet was not therefore automatically unconstitutionally unreasonable. 374 U.S. at pp. 38-41,
