MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER REGARDING DEFENDANTS’ MOTIONS TO SUPPRESS EVIDENCE
TABLE OF CONTENTS
I. INTRODUCTION AND BACKGROUND.....................................824
II. FINDINGS OF FACT......................................................825
III. LEGAL ANALYSIS .......................................................828
A. Standing..............................................................829
B. Entry And Arrest......................................................831
1. Did the door open by consent or upon a demand under color of authority? .........................................................832
2. Probable cause.....................................................838
a. Detective Iddings’s observations..................................838
b. Collective knowledge............................................840
3. Warrantless entry and arrest.........................................843
a. The Payton decision.............................................843
b. The exigent circumstances exception to the Payton rule..............845
c. Exigent circumstances here......................................848
i. Safety considerations........................................848
ii. Destruction of evidence......................................850
4. Summary..........................................................850
C. Search And Seizure.....................................................850
1. Leon and the “good-faith” exception...................................851
a. The Leon decision...............................................851
b. The Fletcher-White line of authority..............................852
c. “Good faith” here...............................................852
2. Searches incident to warrants........................................854
a. The “independent source” rule....................................855
b. The “independent source” analysis here............................857
i. Probable cause prong........................................857
ii. The motivation prong........................................858
IV. CONCLUSION............................................................859
Our Constitution sometimes places high demands on our law enforcement officers not only to do the right thing, but to do it at the right time in the right way. 1 In this case, *824 the defendants were caught with obvious fruits of criminal, activity about them. However, they challenge their arrests and the seizure of evidence on the ground that law enforcement officers violated constitutional standards on both when and how seizures of persons and things must be done. Although the government asserts that the defendants opened the door to their motel room by consent when officers knocked, the defendants contend that they opened the door in response to a demand for entry under color of authority. The defendants also contend that their arrests and subsequent seizures of evidence violated the Fourth Amendment, because the officers did not wait for an arrest warrant before entering their motel room to arrest them. The court must consider whether the defendants consented to the entry of police officers into their motel room or instead acquiesced to a show of authority; whether officers had probable cause and exigent circumstances justifying an immediate entry of the motel room and arrest of the defendants without a warrant; whether any constitutional inadequacies in the seizure of evidence may nonetheless be excused under the Leon “good-faith” exception; and whether the “independent source” rule will salvage the constitutionality of search warrants and seizures pursuant to the warrants, when the warrants were obtained after the officers’ entry into the motel room and were based in part on information gained by that assertedly unconstitutional entry.
I. INTRODUCTION AND BACKGROUND
The criminal eases in which the motions to suppress evidence now before the court are pending are in federal court by virtue of federal firearms charges. In a two-count indictment returned on February 22, 1996, defendant Larry Duane Conner is charged with being a felon in possession of a firearm in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 922(g)(1), 924(a)(2), and 924(e)(1), and possession of a stolen firearm shipped in interstate commerce in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 922(j) and 924(a)(2). In a separate two-count indictment also returned on February 22, 1996, defendant John Charles Tilton is charged with identical offenses.
On April 25, 1996, defendant Conner filed a motion to suppress evidence obtained as a result of the execution of a state search warrant on January 2,1996, for a motel room registered in his name and occupied by both Conner and Tilton. In that motion, Conner also moves to suppress statements he made to law enforcement officers following his arrest. On May 7, 1996, Conner filed an amendment to his motion in which he moves to suppress evidence obtained as a result of the execution of another state search warrant, also on January 2,1996, but this time at his residence, following the search of the motel room. Conner contends in his amendment to his motion that evidence obtained pursuant to the second warrant is “derivative evidence” obtained from the prior illegal police activity at the motel, and therefore must be suppressed as the fruit of the poisonous tree. On April 26, 1996, the court granted Conner’s request for an evidentiary hearing on his motion to suppress and set Conner’s motion down for hearing.
On May 8,1996, defendant Tilton also filed a motion to suppress evidence that mirrors Connor’s original motion. Tilton’s motion again seeks to suppress evidence obtained as a result of the execution of the state search warrant for the motel room where Conner and Tilton were staying. Tilton’s motion also seeks to suppress any statements Tilton made to law enforcement officers following his arrest.
On May 13,1996, after the defendants filed their respective motions, the United States moved to consolidate the evidentiary hearing for the two eases. Conner and Tilton consented to the consolidation. On May 14, 1996, the Honorable Donald E. O’Brien, a senior judge of this district, granted the motion to consolidate and ordered that an evidentiary hearing on defendant Tilton’s motion to suppress be consolidated with the evidentiary hearing already set by this court for defendant Conner’s motion.
The United States timely resisted Conner’s and Tilton’s motions. The government argues that the police gained consensual visual access to the defendants’ motel room when Tilton voluntarily opened the door. *825 The government further argues that exigent circumstances justified the warrantless arrests of the defendants. Finally, the government contends that, even if Conner’s and Tilton’s arrests violated the Fourth Amendment, the evidence found in the motel room and at Conner’s residence is nonetheless admissible under the Leon “good-faith exception.” 2
An evidentiary hearing on the defendants’ motions was held on June 21, 1996. At the hearing, the United States was represented by Assistant United States Attorney Michael Hobart. Defendant Conner was represented by Kevin W. Teehau of the Federal Public Defender’s Office in Des Moines, Iowa. Defendant Tilton was represented by counsel Martha M. MeMinn of Sioux City, Iowa. At the hearing, the United States presented the testimony of Sergeant Doug Young, Officer Steve Polak, and Officer Larry Iddings of the Sioux City Police Department. Defendants offered the testimony of Wendie Oestmann and defendant Tilton.
At the close of the evidentiary hearing the court stated that it would permit the parties to file supplemental briefs and then allow the parties oral arguments. The parties subsequently filed supplemental legal memoranda in support of their respective positions, and the court entertained oral arguments on the motions to suppress on August 20, 1996. At the end of oral arguments, the court stated that it would permit the parties to file supplemental briefs solely on the question of the applicability of the “good-faith exception” established in
United States v. Leon,
II. FINDINGS OF FACT
The court makes the following findings of fact solely for the purpose of disposing of the present motions to suppress. On December 25, 1995, a burglary was reported at the residence of Golby Uhlir in Sioux City, Iowa. The burglary occurred between December 23, 1995, and December 24, 1995. Property stolen in the burglary included a large coin collection, jewelry, silver place settings, and three handguns. Uhlir informed investigating law enforcement officers, including Sergeant Doug Young and Detective Steve Polak of the Sioux City Police Department Detective Bureau, that the stolen coins and currency had been encased in protective plastic coverings. Uhlir also reported that the stolen coins had been stored in maroon, gold, and blue boxes, which in turn were kept in several brown briefcases. Uhlir also gave the law enforcement officers descriptions of the handguns taken from his residence.
On the morning of January 2,1996, Deputy Dave Fox of the Woodbury County Sheriffs Office received a telephone call from a person who wished to remain anonymous. This individual informed Deputy Fox that Larry Conner and John Tilton had burglarized the Uhlir residence. The anonymous tipster further told Deputy Fox that Conner and Tilton were staying at a motel or hotel in Sioux City and were driving a red Pontiac Fiero with Iowa license plate WEH624. In addition, the informant told Deputy Fox that Conner and Tilton had the coins with them at the hotel or motel room and that they were planning to leave the city sometime later that day to dispose of the stolen property. After speaking with the individual, Deputy Fox relayed the information obtained to Detective Polak.
Acting on the tip received by Deputy Fox, Sioux City Police investigators were dispatched to check area motels for the red Fiero that Conner and Tilton were supposed *826 to be driving. Because three handguns had been taken in the burglary, the investigators were warned that Conner and Tilton might be armed. Sioux City Police Detectives Monlux and Rohde located the red Fiero in front of Room 31 at the Elmdale Motel in Sioux City, Iowa. Detectives Monlux and Rohde radioed for the assistance of other officers, and waited in their police vehicle, which was parked at the rear of the motel.
Sergeant Young, Detective Polak, and Detective Iddings responded to the call from Detectives Monlux and Rohde. Sioux City Police Officer Mark Hein also arrived at the motel. Officer Hein, who was the only police officer in uniform, parked his vehicle at the front of the motel in order to observe the front door of the motel room and the Fiero. The officers’ plan was to knock on the front door of the room and attempt to speak to the individuals inside about the information that Deputy Fox had received concerning the Uhlir burglary. Sergeant Young was in charge of the investigation at the motel. Sergeant Young incorrectly assumed that either Detective Monlux or Detective Rohde had cheeked with the motel office to ascertain who had rented Room 31. At the time the officers approached Room 31 they did not know that the room had been rented to Conner. 3 Apparently the officers approached Room 31 solely because the red Fiero was parked directly in front of it.
Sergeant Young and Officer Hein went to the front door of Room 31, and Detectives Iddings and Polak positioned themselves south of the picture window for Room 31. Detectives Monlux and Rohde took up positions behind the motel. From his vantage point, Detective Iddings noticed packages of coins on the windowsill between the room’s curtains and window. Detective Iddings motioned to the coins on the windowsill, but Sergeant Young did not notice Iddings’s gesture nor the coins on the windowsill. Detective Iddings did not tell other officers on the scene that he had seen the coins or take any other action to draw the coins to their attention. Although he was assisting the other officers at the motel, Iddings had not previously been involved in the investigation of the Uhlir burglary. As a result, until that morning, Iddings was unfamiliar with the property taken during the Uhlir burglary. Detective Polak informed him that morning that a coin collection had been taken in the burglary and that the car driven by suspects in the burglary had been located at the motel.
Officer Hein knocked on the door of Room 31 and identified himself as a police officer. The officers received no response from the room. Officer Hein knocked again, and announced a second time that they were police officers. Detective Polak indicated to the other police officers that he had seen someone looking out of the picture window of Room 31. In response, Sergeant Young repositioned himself to the north of the door, and withdrew his pistol from its holster and held the pistol behind his back so that it wasn’t exposed to anyone’s view. Officer Hein again knocked and announced the presence of the officers. Sergeant Young shouted, “Open up,” in a voice loud enough to be heard two rooms away by Wendie Oestmann, another resident at the motel. 4 The officers’ *827 knocking on the door was loud enough to awaken Ms. Oestmann and to cause another female guest of the motel to step out of her room under the mistaken belief that the police were knocking at her door. 5
A short time after Officer Hein knocked on the door for the third time, Tilton opened the door to the room. Tilton opened the door in response to Sergeant Young’s command that he open the door. When Tilton opened the door, Sergeant Young observed what appeared to be foreign currency at the foot of one bed, coins and envelopes the size of currency on the bed, as well as blue, gold, and maroon boxes matching the description given by Uhlir. Believing the currency and other materials he observed to be the proceeds of the Uhlir burglary, Sergeant Young drew his weapon on Tilton and ordered him to back away from the door. 6 Tilton complied with Sergeant Young’s request and backed away from the doorway. Sergeant Young and Officer Hein then entered the motel room and secured Tilton by ordering him to the floor and handcuffing him. At that point, the officers observed other coins and coin packages scattered throughout the room as well as three large briefcases sitting in the corner of the motel room that appeared to be similar to those described by Uhlir.
After Tilton was secured, the officers asked Tilton where Conner was, and Tilton told the officers that he was in the motel room’s bathroom. Fearing that Conner might be armed, the officers ordered Conner to come out of the bathroom. When Conner complied with the officers’ request and came out of the bathroom, the officers arrested him. Conner was taken to a patrol car outside the motel while Tilton was detained in the motel room. Tilton and Conner were advised of their constitutional rights as required under.
Miranda v. Arizona,
The motel room was secured by the officers while Detective Polak sought a search warrant. Detective Iddings stayed at the motel room while a search warrant was being sought. Sergeant Young instructed Detective Iddings to stay at the motel,- not to let anyone in the motel room, not to touch anything, and not to conduct a search of the room. Detective Iddings followed these directives and did not conduct a search of the room. The search warrant application signed by Detective Polak contained the following information:
A. Facts of which I have personal knowledge without using an informant.
1. Facts: On 12-25-95 a burglary occurred at 4605 Meadow Lane in which the attached list of property was report *828 ed as stolen. On 1-2-96 information was received from the Woodbury County Sheriffs Office that Larry Conner and John Tilton were involved in this burglary and that they were staying at a local motel. They were operating a red 1986 Pontiac Fiero, License/WEH624. The vehicle was located on 1-2-96 parked at the Elmdale Motel parked in front of Room #31. It was verified that this room was rented to Larry Conner on 12-26-95. Officers knocked on the door and identified themselves and Mr. Tilton opened the door. At that time, in plain view were coin rolls and coin sets throughout the room.
Government Exhibit #AA, Search Warrant Application, p. 3. A search warrant was secured and the room was subsequently searched. The officers seized a Smith & Wesson .38 caliber revolver, a Colt pistol, coins, three large briefcases, and other items believed to have been taken during the Uhlir burglary.
Sergeant Young next obtained a search warrant for Conner’s residence in Sloan, Iowa. The application for the second search warrant, signed by Sergeant Young, contained the following information:
A. Facts of which I have personal knowledge without using an informant.
1. Facts: On 12-25-95 a burglary occurred at 4605 Meadow Lane in which approximately $100,000 in coins were taken along with the vehicle and guns listed on page one of the Search Warrant. That, on 1-2-96 Detective Polak received information from Deputy Fox, Woodbury County Sheriffs Department, that an informant called him and indicated that the suspects in this burglary were staying in an unknown motel in Sioux City and were driving a red 1986 Pontiac Fiero, license/WEH624. That, the two suspects have the stolen property in their possession. Informant indicated to Deputy Fox that the suspects were Larry Conner and John Tilton. On 1-2-96 Detectives Monlux and Rohde located the suspect vehicle at the Elm-dale Motel, 22nd & Highway 75 North, Sioux City; and the vehicle was parked in front of Room # 31. That, the clerk of the Elmdale was contacted by detectives and registration information indicated that Larry Conner was renting Room # 31 and gave a home address of 2027 310th Street, Sloan, Iowa. That, this affiant is familiar with the criminal history of Larry Conner and John Til-ton. That, this affiant along with Officer Hein knocked on the door to Room # 31 and John Tilton looked out the window. Officers announced their presence and approximately 3 minutes later Tilton opened the door to the room. That, lying on top of the bed I observed coin boxes that resembled those described by the victim of the burglary. After entering the room, I observed several brief cases and numerous packages of coins which also fit the description given by the victim. After securing the room and making application for a search warrant for that room, information was again received from Deputy Fox that more stolen property could be located at 2027 310th Street, Sloan, Iowa. That, this is the residence of Donna and Larry Conner.
Government Exhibit #BB, Search Warrant Application, p. 3. During the search of the Sloan residence, law enforcement officers seized items they believed had also been taken during the Uhlir burglary.
III. LEGAL ANALYSIS
The Fourth Amendment prohibits “unreasonable searches and seizures” and assures “the right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects.” The protections afforded by the Fourth Amendment provide individuals with a right of privacy which must not be arbitrarily invaded by either the federal government or the states.
Wolf v. Colorado,
We have long held that the “touchstone of the Fourth Amendment is reasonableness.” Florida v. Jimeno,500 U.S. 248 , 250,111 S.Ct. 1801 , [1803]114 L.Ed.2d 297 (1991). Reasonableness, in turn, is mea *829 sured in objective terms by examining the totality of the circumstances.
Ohio v. Robinette,
— U.S.-,-,
Any evidence secured through an unreasonable, hence illegal, search and seizure may not be used in a federal prosecution,
Weeks v. United States,
Because of the overlap in the issues raised in Conner’s and Tilton’s motions, the court will proceed by addressing each of the individual issues raised in the motions seriatim. These issues fall into three general categories: the standing of the defendants to assert constitutional violations from the entry into and search of the motel room; the constitutionality of the entry into the motel room and the arrest of the defendants; and the constitutionality of the subsequent searches and seizures.
A. Standing
Initially, the court must consider whether defendants Conner and Tilton have standing to object to the search of the motel room. A defendant’s Fourth Amendment rights cannot be violated by a search unless he or she has a legitimate expectation of privacy in the area searched.
Rakas v. Illinois,
In his motion, Conner contends that Room 31 of the Elmdale Motel was registered in his name- and he was residing there. Tilton asserts in his motion and moving papers that, while the room was in Conner’s name, he also was residing there. A party seeking to challenge a search of commercial premises bears the burden of establishing a reasonable expectation of privacy.
See Rakas,
Whether a party has an actual subjective expectation of privacy depends on several factors. Courts have looked to whether the defendant had a possessory interest in the things seized or place searched, whether he has the right to exclude others from that place, whether he has exhibited a subjective expectation that the place would remain free from governmental intrusion, whether he took normal precautions to maintain his privacy, and whether he was legitimately on the premises.
See United States v. Nabors,
Here, the government does not challenge Conner’s and Tilton’s assertions that they were both residing at Room 31 nor that Room 31 was registered in Conner’s name. The evidence is uncontested that Tilton had occupancy rights in the Elmdale motel room assigned to Conner. The court concludes that both defendants had subjective expectations of privacy in the motel room, for a number of reasons, all recognized in the
Nabors
decision: (1) each had a possessory interest in the motel room; (2) each had the right to exclude others from that place; (3) each exhibited a subjective expectation that the place would remain free from governmental intrusion by refusing to open the door to police officers, even though the officers had identified themselves as the police, until the defendants were ordered to open the door; (4) the defendants had taken normal precautions to maintain their privacy, such as by keeping the door and curtains to the motel room closed; and (5) each was legitimately on the premises by virtue of having rented the motel room.
See Nabors,
As to the willingness of society to accept the defendants’ expectation of privacy, the second prong of the expectation of privacy test,
see, e.g., Smith,
Because the defendants have satisfied both prongs of the expectation of privacy test, the court concludes that both Conner and Tilton possessed a reasonable expectation of privacy in Room 31 of the Elmdale Motel. Thus, the court concludes that both Conner and Tilton had legitimate expectations of privacy in the motel room for the purposes of the Fourth Amendment. , Consequently, both have standing to challenge the entry into and search of that motel room by law enforcement officers.
Rakas,
B. Entry And Arrest
Because both defendants have standing to seek to suppress evidence seized from the motel room, the next questions before the court concern the propriety of the officer’s entry into the motel room and their arrest of the defendants. Much depends upon how law enforcement officers gained visual access to the interior of the motel room, because plainly once they gained such access, the likely fruits of crime were in plain view around the motel room, justifying seizure of such items and further search, as well as establishing probable cause for the defendants’ arrest.
Cf. United States v. Winsor,
*832 1. Did the door open by consent or upon a demand under color of authority?
In
United States v. Peters,
When an individual voluntarily opens the door of his or her place of residence in response to a simple knock, the individual is knowingly exposing to the public anything that can be seen through that open door and thus is not afforded fourth amendment protection. United States v. Wright,641 F.2d 602 , 604 (8th Cir.), cert. denied,451 U.S. 1021 ,101 S.Ct. 3014 ,69 L.Ed.2d 394 (1981); see also Katz v. United States,389 U.S. 347 , 351,88 S.Ct. 507 , 511,19 L.Ed.2d 576 (1967) (“What a person knowingly exposes to the public, even in his or her own home or office, is not a subject of Fourth Amendment protection.”). After Peters opened the door to the hotel room in which he was staying in response to the simple knock on the door by the police officers, a search did not occur when the detective looked into Peters’ room through the open doorway. Therefore, any contraband in “plain view,” here the crack cocaine and the drug paraphernalia, was properly seized by the officers under the plain view doctrine. See Horton v. California, [496] U.S. [128], [136-38]110 S.Ct. 2301 , 2308,110 L.Ed.2d 112 (1990); United States v. Gamer,907 F.2d 60 , 62 (8th Cir.l990)[, cert. denied,498 U.S. 1068 ,111 S.Ct. 787 ,112 L.Ed.2d 849 (1991) ].
Peters,
[t]he officers, acting on an anonymous tip, knocked on [the defendant’s] door and asked to come in. [The defendant] willingly let them in. The officers did not enter with a display of force or otherwise in a coercive manner. They .did not demand or obtain entry under authority of law. They simply knocked on the door and were let in. The evidence at issue was thereafter observed either in plain view or as a result of [the defendant’s] consent to search the entire house.
Deanda,
Similarly, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals recently held that a defendant who opened the door in response to a simple knock by police officers could not complain of his warrantless arrest.
United States v. Vaneaton,
*833 in Vaneaton’s case the uniformed police used no force or threats, and unlike Johnson, they did not resort to a subterfuge or a ruse, or draw weapons. When Vaneaton saw them through the window, he voluntarily opened the door and exposed both himself and the immediate area to them. No threats or force were used by the police to get him to open the door, and his actions were not . taken in response to a claim of lawful authority.
Vaneaton,
The government asserts, without elaborating its argument, that this case presents only a constitutional “knock and talk” scenario, citing
Florida v. Bostick,
However, as the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals seemed to suggest in
Peters
and
Deanda,
and the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals more explicitly stated in
Vaneaton,
the situation. is different when the .defendant does not voluntarily respond to a “simple knock on the door.”
Deanda,
More recently, the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals has also distinguished between physical entry, not just visual entry, obtained by consent and entry obtained when a door is opened “in response to a ‘show of official authority.’ ”
United States v. Tovar-Rico,
*834 [t]he circumstances of the entry to [the defendant’s] apartment [were] summed up by the magistrate judge as follows: “Defendant was first confronted by police officers that day when at least five officers knocked loudly at her door, announced their identity as police officers through the closed door, and requested permission to enter. Defendant then opened the door and the officers entered quickly with guns drawn to do the protective sweep.” He concluded that under the circumstances, the defendant did not have any understanding of her right to refuse entry and demand a warrant.
Tovar-Rico,
The magistrate judge found the consent involuntary. He opined that Tovar had already observed officers explore every room in the apartment and could not reasonably have known that she could still refuse a search. We agree. We entertain no doubt that Tovar opened the door in response to a “show of official authority” and cannot be deemed to have consented to the agents’ entry or to have voluntarily consented to the search. Cf. Bumper v. North Carolina,391 U.S. 543 , 549,88 S.Ct. 1788 , 1792,20 L.Ed.2d 797 (1968); United States v. Edmondson,791 F.2d 1512 , 1515 (11th Cir.1986). “[W]here the validity of a search rests on consent, the State has the burden of proving that the necessary consent was obtained and that it was freely and voluntarily given, a burden that is not satisfied by showing a mere submission to a claim of lawful authority.” Florida v. Royer,460 U.S. 491 , 497,103 S.Ct. 1319 , 1324,75 L.Ed.2d 229 (1983).
After a careful review of the uneontradicted facts established in the record, we conclude that the condition which existed at the time made the entry illegal and support the district court’s finding that the consent to search was not voluntary.
Tovar-Rico,
The Ninth and Eleventh Circuit Courts of Appeals are not alone in holding that where a door is opened in response to coercion or a demand under color of authority, the subsequent view of, entry into, or search of the interior thus revealed is not the result of consent or voluntary action by the defendant.
See United States v. Edmondson,
Even the en bane decision of the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals in
Tobin,
which both preceded the panel decision in
TovarRico,
and must be contrasted with
TovarRico,
because the court ultimately found that the defendant in the case before it in
Tobin
opened the door voluntarily, nonetheless supports the same rule of law. In
Tobin,
the court also recognized the difference between “eases in which police have used their position to demand entry” and cases in which the defendant voluntarily opened the door in response to a request that he or she do so, citing the same authority relied on by the later panel in
Tovar-Rico. Tobin,
The court concludes from these authorities that an unconstitutional “search” occurs, when officers gain visual or physical access to a motel room, even if objects in the interior of a motel room are in plain view when the door is opened, when the door is not opened voluntarily, but is instead opened in response to a demand under color- of authority.
See, e.g., Tovar-Rico,
The Supreme Court has said,
*836 When a prosecutor seeks to rely upon consent to justify the lawfulness of a search, he has the burden of proving that the consent was, in fact, freely and voluntarily given. This burden cannot be discharged by showing no more than acquiescence to a claim of lawful authority.
Bumper v. North Carolina,
A search based upon an individual’s consent may be undertaken by law enforcement agents without a warrant or probable cause, and any evidence discovered during the search may be seized and admitted at trial. Schneckloth v. Bustamonte,412 U.S. 218 , 219,93 S.Ct. 2041 , 2043-44,36 L.Ed.2d 854 (1973) (Schneckloth). To justify a consensual search, the prosecution has the burden of proving that an individual voluntarily consented to the search. United States v. Severe,29 F.3d 444 , 446 (8th Cir.1994) (Severe) (citing United States v. Larson,978 F.2d 1021 , 1023 (8th Cir.l992))[, cert. denied, — U.S.-,115 S.Ct. 763 ,130 L.Ed.2d 660 (1995) ]. The prosecution need not prove that the individual was fully aware of his or her rights under the Fourth Amendment in order to establish a voluntary consent. Schneckloth,412 U.S. at 235 ,93 S.Ct. at 2051-52 . The totality of the circumstances must be considered by the court to determine whether consent was given voluntarily and without coercion. Severe,29 F.3d at 446 ; United States v. Barahona,990 F.2d 412 , 417 (8th Cir.1993) (citing Schneckloth,412 U.S. at 227 ,93 S.Ct. at 2048 ). Consent may be inferred through words, actions or conduct of the individual subject to the search. United States v. Gleason,25 F.3d 605 , 607 (8th Cir.), cert. denied, — U.S. -,115 S.Ct. 283 ,130 L.Ed.2d 199 (1994).
The question of whether consent to search is present is an issue of fact that requires consideration of the totality of the circumstances. Severe,29 F.3d at 446 (citing United States v. Cortez,935 F.2d 135 , 142 (8th Cir.1991), cert. denied,502 U.S. 1062 ,112 S.Ct. 945 ,117 L.Ed.2d 114 (1992)); see Schneckloth,412 U.S. at 227 ,93 S.Ct. at 2048 . A district court’s finding of consent to search is reviewed under the clearly erroneous standard. Id.
United States v. Heath,
In Schneckloth v. Bustamonte,412 U.S. 218 ,93 S.Ct. 2041 ,36 L.Ed.2d 854 (1973), it was argued that ... consent [to a search] could not be valid unless the defendant knew that he had a right to refuse the request. We rejected this argument: “While knowledge of the right to refuse consent is one factor to be taken into account, the government need not establish such knowledge as the sine qua non of an effective consent.” Id., at 227 [93 S.Ct. at 2048 ]. And just as it “would be thoroughly impractical to impose on the normal consent search the detailed requirements of an effective warning,” id. at 231 [93 S.Ct. at 2050 ], so too would it be unrealistic to require police officers to always inform detainees that they are free to go before a consent to search may be deemed voluntary.
The Fourth Amendment test for a valid consent to search is that the consent be voluntary, and “[vjoluntariness is a question of fact to be dMermined from all the circumstances, ” id., at 248-249 [93 S.Ct. at 2059 ].
Robinette,
— U.S. at-,
The court concludes, from the totality of the circumstances, that Tilton involuntarily opened the door to the motel room pursuant to a command of entry under color of authority; thus, Tilton did not consent to the officers’ view of anything revealed beyond the door or to entry of the officers into the motel room to make a search or to effect the arrest of the defendants. Compare Peters, 912 *837 F.2d at 210 (a defendant who opens a door voluntarily “knowingly expos[es] to the public anything that can be seen through that open door and thus is not afforded fourth amendment protection.”).
The circumstances here do not present the “simple knock on the door” of a motel room that the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals held in
Peters
and
Deanda
violates no constitutional standards.
Id.
Instead, the circumstances here “show[ ] no. more than acqtueseence to a claim of lawful authority.”
Bumper,
Because Tilton opened the door in response to a show of official authority, and his opening of the door was thus nonconsensual, the officers’ visual search of and entry into the motel room was illegal, and the evidence later obtained must be suppressed,
see To-var-Rico,
*838 2. Probable cause
The government suggests that other factors do indeed sanitize the searches challenged by the present motions to suppress. The government suggests that the police had probable cause to arrest Tilton and Conner when Detective Iddings spotted the coins on the windowsill to Room 31 and that exigent circumstances justified entering the motel room to effect the defendants’ arrests without waiting for a warrant. Therefore, the questions the court must next address are whether the police had probable cause to arrest Conner and Tilton when Detective Iddings saw the coins on the windowsill, and if so, whether the failure of the police officers to obtain an arrest warrant prior to entering the motel room to effect the arrests was contrary to the Supreme Court’s holding in
Payton v. New York,
Probable cause is determined by the totality of the circumstances.
Illinois v. Gates,
The government concedes that the officers did not have probable cause to arrest Conner and Tilton when the officers arrived at the motel. Tr. at p. 6. However, the government argues that, at the time the police officers gained access to the motel room, the collective knowledge of the officers involved established probable cause to arrest the defendants, because Detective Iddings had obtained the additional information that a box of coins was on the interior windowsill of Room 31 by looking in the window from the sidewalk in front of the room.
a. Detective Iddings’s observations
Before determining whether Detective Iddings’s observations were sufficient to give the officers present at the motel probable cause to arrest Conner and Tilton, the court must first consider whether Detective Iddings’s observations themselves violated the Fourth Amendment. Although the court has concluded that Conner and Tilton had a privacy interest in the interior of Room 31, the same cannot be said of the immediate exterior of the motel, including the sidewalk area in front of Room 31. “[T]he Fourth Amendment protects people, not places.”
Katz v. United States,
Clearly, when a person is in a public place, that person has no legitimate expectation of privacy. The sidewalk area outside Room 31 is just such a public setting in which Conner and Tilton did not have a reasonable expectation of privacy.
See United States v. McGrane,
Similarly, Officer Iddings’s observations from the sidewalk area did not implicate the defendants’ Fourth Amendment interests.
Katz,
Although Detective Iddings’s observations did not violate the Fourth Amendment, the critical question here is whether those observations provided probable cause for the officers’ entry into the motel room to arrest the defendants. Whether Detective Iddings’s observations contributed to or established probable cause to arrest Conner and Tilton depends upon the contribution of those observations to the collective knowledge of the officers present.
b. Collective knowledge
The Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals has said,
Because probable cause may be based on the collective knowledge of all law enforcement officers involved in an investigation and need not be based solely upon the information within the knowledge of the officer on the scene if there is some degree of communication, see United States v. Rich,795 F.2d 680 , 682 (8th Cir.1986); United States v. Briley,726 F.2d 1301 , 1305 (8th Cir.1984), [an arresting officer’s] lack of first-hand knowledge is irrelevant.
United States v. Horne, 4
F.3d 579, 585-86 (8th Cir.1993),
cert. denied,
Other courts have expressly held that communication among the officers was essential
*841
to application of the “collective knowledge” rule. Thus, in
United States v. Shareef,
This court finds that the rule concerning the need for communication among the officers in order to invoke the “collective knowledge” rule is somewhat confused in some circuits.
See, e.g., United States v. Butler,
Whatever the merits of imputing or presuming communication among officers working together in order to invoke the “collective knowledge” rule, like the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals in
Shareef,
However, the court must also consider whether Detective Iddings, who alone observed the coins on the windowsill, possessed sufficient second-hand information communicated to him by other officers with whom he was working that, coupled with his own uncommunieated observations, gave
him
probable cause to arrest Tilton and Conner. In other words, the court finds that only Detective Iddings, of all the officers present at the motel, could possibly have had sufficient “collective knowledge” to establish probable cause to arrest Conner and Tilton. On January 2, 1996, the officers had been informed that two men had been involved the Uhlir burglary, Conner and Tilton. They also
*843
knew that Conner and Tilton were supposed to be staying at a motel or hotel in Sioux City and were supposed to be driving a red Pontiac Fiero with Iowa license plate WEH624. In addition, the officers knew that Conner and Tilton were supposed to have the coins with them at the motel room. The officers located the red Fiero at the Elmdale motel in front of Room 31. What is unclear from the record is how much of this information was communicated to Detective Iddings when he became involved in the investigation. As the court stated in its findings of fact, although Detective Iddings was assisting the other officers at the motel, he had not previously been involved in the investigation of the Uhlir burglary. As a result, until that morning, Iddings was unfamiliar with the property taken during the Uhlir burglary. Detective Polak informed Detective Iddings that morning that a coin collection had been taken in the burglary and that the ear driven by suspects in the burglary had been located at the motel. Although the precise scope or detail of the information conveyed to Detective Iddings is unclear, he apparently had at least a summary of the facts known to all officers at the motel.
Cf. Bernard,
The probable cause determination here is an extremely close question. At the time the officers knocked on the door to Room 31, they apparently did so solely because the red Fiero was parked directly in front of that room, although none of the officers had ascertained whether either Tilton or Conners had rented Room 31. The record also does not disclose that the police had linked either Tilton or Conner to the red Fiero parked in front of Room 31. If the police had garnered such information, their probable cause argument would be considerably stronger. Absent such information, which might establish a nexus between Tilton or Conner and the location where the apparent proceeds of' the burglary were found by Detective Iddings, however, probable cause probably did not exist for the arrest of the defendants, even with Detective Iddings’s observations. ‘
Furthermore, it is, apparent from the portions of the record that are clear that the arresting officers had every intention of arresting whoever they found inside the motel room when they demanded that the door be opened, regardless of the fact that none of the other officers present had been advised of Detective' Iddings’s observations of the coins on the windowsill, and despite the fact that the government concedes that the officers did not have probable cause when they arrived at the motel. It is thus apparent to the court that the officers disregarded the probable cause requirement when making their decision to demand entry into the motel room. Ultimately, however, the court need not make, nor rest upon if it were to make, a conclusion that the arresting officers lacked probable cause, because, assuming that probable case existed for the arrest of whoever was in the motel room when the police knocked on the motel room door, the court finds other patent constitutional infirmities undermine the officers’ entry into the motel room and arrest of the occupants.
3. Warrantless entry and arrest
At the time Tilton and Conner were arrested, the police had' not obtained an arrest warrant to do so. The defendants ■ assert that the police officers’ failure to obtain an arrest warrant prior to entering the motel room and arresting them was contrary to the holding of the United States Supreme Court in
Payton v. New York,
a. The Payton decision
In
Payton,
police officers without any warrant entered a suspect’s home in order to arrest him.
Payton,
The Fourth Amendment protects the individual’s privacy in a variety of settings. In none is the zone of privacy more clearly defined than when bounded by the unambiguous physical dimensions of an individual’s home — a zone that finds its roots in clear and specific constitutional terms: “The right of the people to be secure in their ... houses ... shall not be violated.” ... In terms that apply equally to seizures of property and to seizures of persons, the Fourth Amendment has drawn a firm line at the entrance to the house. Absent exigent circumstances, that threshold may not reasonably be crossed without a warrant.
Id.
(citations omitted);
United States v. Vance,
In
Payton,
the Court declared that “[pjhysical entry of the home is the chief evil against which the wording of the Fourth Amendment is directed,” therefore, “an entry to arrest and an entry to search for and to seize property implicate the same interest in preserving the privacy and sanctity of the home, and justify the same level of constitutional protection.”
Id.
at 588,
In
New York v. Harris,
It is the defendants’ contention that the warrantless entry into the motel room and their warrantless arrests in this case were unconstitutional under
Payton.
The government’s response to the defendants’ claim is that the warrantless entry and arrests in this ease were justified by exigent circumstances. Where a warrantless entry violates the Fourth Amendment standards stated in
Pay-ton,
the court must suppress all evidence tainted by the illegal entry.
Johnson,
b. The exigent circumstances exception to the Payton rule
As the court noted above, under
Payton,
seizures inside a residence without a warrant are presumptively unreasonable, absent consent or exigent circumstances.
Payton,
The Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals has held that a finding of exigent circumstances is a finding of fact reviewed for clear error.
United States v. Parris,
An exigency must be assessed in light of the totality of the circumstances.
Wihbey,
The “exigent circumstances” inquiry is limited to the objective facts reasonably known to, or discoverable by, the officers at the time of the arrest.
See Illinois v. Rodriguez,
The government cannot justify a search on the basis of exigent circumstances that are of the law enforcement officer’s own making.
See Johnson,
This general holding will not dispose of this case or, in fact, of many cases. For in some sense the police always create the exigent circumstances that justify warrant-less entries and arrests. Their discovery of the criminal causes him to flee; their discovery of the contraband causes the criminal’s attempt to destroy or divert the evidence. For the claim of exigent circumstances to be adequately evaluated, the better question to ask is: how did those urgent circumstances come about? This antecedent inquiry — into the reasonableness and propriety of the investigative tactics that generated the exigency — seems to be what courts have in fact been doing in these kinds of cases.
Duchi,
c. Exigent circumstances here
The government advances two theories of exigent circumstances as justifying the warrantless arrest of Tilton and Conner in this case. First, the government suggests that safety considerations created exigent circumstances. Second, the government advances the argument that the threatened destruction of evidence inside the motel room before a warrant could be obtained constituted exigent circumstances. The court will consider each of these arguments in turn.
i.
Safety considerations.
It is clear from decisions of the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals that the test of whether legitimate grounds for a warrantless entry based on safety exist depends upon whether the officers reasonably perceived exigent circumstances to exist.
See, e.g., Vance,
First, it must be noted that none of the officers testified that at the time they knocked on the door they harbored beliefs that exigent circumstances existed. Furthermore, the officers’ purported fears for their own and the public’s safety were unreasonable given the circumstances that confronted them. The officers did not know who was in Room 31 at the time they commanded the occupants to open the door. Furthermore, although the officers had been informed that three firearms had been taken during the Uhlir burglary, they did not know that two pistols had been secreted in the motel room nor that the weapons were loaded.
See United States v. Murphy,
Nor does the seriousness of the offense the defendants were believed to have committed necessarily suggest any exigency.
See Ball,
A further consideration here is the fact that the police had the situation well in hand, with four officers in front of the motel and two officers guarding the rear.
United States v. Templeman,
ii. Destruction of evidence.
Finally, there can be no claim that immediate police action was needed to prevent the imminent destruction of vital evidence.
See Ball,
4. Summary
Because both of the government’s grounds for asserting exigent circumstances in this case are untenable, the court concludes that no exception to Payton’s warrant requirement has been shown, and the warrantless entry into Room 31 violated the Fourth Amendment. Where a warrantless entry violates the Fourth Amendment standards stated in
Payton,
the court must suppress all evidence tainted by the illegal entry,
Johnson,
C. Search And Seizure
The government argues that even if the arrest of the defendants violated the Fourth Amendment, the evidence found in the motel room and as a result of entering the motel room is nonetheless admissible under the “good-faith exception” set forth in
Leon
and its progeny. In particular, the government
*851
relies on a line of Eighth Circuit precedent involving Terry-type investigative stops at airports and bus terminals conducted without reasonable suspicion.
See United States v. Fletcher,
1. Leon and the “good-faith” exception a. The Leon decision
The Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals has noted that “[t]he Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution does not expressly preclude the use of evidence obtained in its violation,” citing
Leon. United States v. Johnson,
The Supreme Court explained that the exclusionary rule is a deterrent measure designed to ensure compliance with the Fourth Amendment.
See id.
at 906,
Although
Leon
weakened the exclusionary rule, the Supreme Court did not demonstrate the rule. The Supreme Court acknowledged that suppression would continue to be appropriate in those situations where, notwithstanding the issuance of a warrant, “the law enforcement officer had knowledge, or may properly be charged with knowledge, that the search was unconstitutional under the Fourth Amendment.”
Id.
at 919,
Suppression .... remains an appropriate remedy if the magistrate or judge in issuing a warrant was misled by information in an affidavit that the affiant knew was false or would have known was false except for his disregard of the truth---- The exception we recognize today will also not apply in cases where the issuing magistrate wholly abandoned his judicial role ...; in such circumstances, no reasonably well trained officer should rely on the warrant. Nor would an officer manifest objective good faith in relying on a warrant based on an affidavit “so lacking in indicia of probable cause as to render official belief in its existence entirely unreasonable.” ... Finally, depending on the circumstances of the particular case, a warrant may be so facially deficient — i.e., in failing to particu *852 larize the place to be searched or the things to be seized — that the executing officers cannot reasonably presume it to be valid.
Id.
at 923,
b. The Fletcher-White line of authority
As noted above, the government relies on a line of Eighth Circuit precedent following
Leon
involving Terry-type investigative stops at airports and bus terminals conducted without reasonable suspicion as establishing the applicability of the good faith exception for evidence garnered here as a result of the illegal entry into the motel room.
See Fletcher,
c. “Good faith” here
The factual situation confronting the court here is quite dissimilar from the circumstances presented in the
Fletcher-White
line of cases. In each of those cases, the court confronted Terry-type investigative stops conducted at airports and bus terminals without reasonable suspicion.
See Fletcher,
The court finds it significant that the
Fletcher-White
line of authority has never been extended beyond the factual scenario presented in each of those cases: Terry-type investigative stops conducted without reasonable suspicion. Here, by contrast, the officers’ actions do not hang on a determination of reasonable suspicion for a Terry-type stop. Rather, the court is faced with the officers’ unlawful command to open the door of the defendants’ temporary dwelling, thus impinging on the occupants’ Fourth Amendment protections,
see, e.g., Payton,
Even assuming the
Fletcher-White
line of authority applies to all police actions, the good-faith rule of
Leon
cannot be invoked here. Neither
White
nor
Leon
is “unqualified in [its] application.”
O’Neal,
Here, the court finds the opposite to be true. No officer could in good faith believe, under the facts as they existed at the time, that the defendants consented to the officers’ visual or physical access to the motel room. As the court concluded above, Tilton involuntarily opened the door to the motel room pursuant to a command of entry under color of authority. The officers pounded on the door to the defendants’ motel room in a manner loud enough to awaken neighbors and alert them to their actions. When Tilton did not respond to the initial actions of the officers, the officers continued to knock and Sergeant Young commanded Tilton to “open the door.” Under such circumstances, Til-ton’s decision to open the motel room door cannot reasonably be construed to be a voluntary one.
See, e.g., Winsor,
Furthermore, although it is a close question whether probable cause existed to arrest the defendants based on the information available to officers at the time they gained access to the motel room, which might bring officers close enough to the line to be within the ambit of
Leon
as to probable cause,
O’Neal,
As the Supreme Court instructed in
Leon,
“the exclusionary rule is designed to deter police misconduct rather than to punish the errors of judges and magistrates.”
Leon,
The fact that the police did not actually conduct a full-blown search of the motel room ánd Conner’s residence until after they obtained a search warrant is of little consequence. Obtaining a search warrant could not sanitize the officers’ prior misconduct. As the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals has observed, “If clearly illegal police behavior can be sanitized by the issuance of a search warrant, then there will be no deterrence, and the protective aims of the exclusionary rule will be severely impaired if not eliminated.”
O’Neal,
2. Searches incident to warrants
The government did not take the next essential step after arguing for applicability of the Leon “good-faith” exception, which was to argue that even if the Leon exception was inapplicable, the searches incident to warrants were still’ constitutionally valid, because the warrants were based, at least in part, on information from sources independent of the unconstitutional entry. The court is at a loss to understand such an oversight, but nonetheless finds that it must consider whether the seizures pursuant to search warrants are independently valid.
*855 a. The “independent source” rule
Specifically, the court proceeds to the final question: whether the search warrants for the motel room and Conner’s home in Sloan, obtained after the coins and other materials were observed in the motel room, each constituted an “independent source” of the evidence justifying the evidence’s admissibility. In
United States v. Warren,
The motion to suppress was properly denied because the search warrant was not based on any evidence discerned from the entry and protective sweep. See Segura v. United States,468 U.S. 796 , 805,104 S.Ct. 3380 , 3385,82 L.Ed.2d 599 (1984). In Segura, the Supreme Court found that evidence obtain[ed] pursuant to a valid search warrant, but after an illegal entry, was properly admissible because the government learned of the evidence from an independent source. Id. Similarly, here, the search warrant was not based upon any information obtained from the entry or the protective sweep[;] rather the warrant was based upon wholly independent information. The exclusionary rule does not apply to evidence that is not tainted by a prior unconstitutional search or seizure. See id. at 804,104 S.Ct. at 3385 .
Warren,
In a decision subsequent to
Segura,
the case upon which the
Warren
decision relied, the Supreme Court also explained that the “independent source” doctrine “applie[s] to evidence initially discovered during, or as a consequence of, an unlawful search, but later obtained independently from activities untainted by the initial illegality.”
Murray v. United States,
In
Murray,
police officers obtained a search warrant for a warehouse after they already had entered it and observed bales of what they suspected was marijuana.
Id.
at 535-36,
In a decision discussing both
Segura
and
Murray, United States v. Estrada,
In ascertaining whether the “independent source” doctrine applies, the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals, following
Murray,
has found that the “question turned on whether ‘the agents’ decision to seek the warrant was prompted by what they had seen during the [illegal] entry, or [whether] information obtained during that entry was presented to the Magistrate and affected his decision to issue the warrant.’”
Mithun,
b. The “independent source” analysis here
i. Probable cause prong.
The first prong of the test may be described as the “probable cause” prong of the analysis, because the court must ask whether the warrant is supported by probable cause derived from sources independent of the illegal entry,
see, e.g., Johnson,
Here, however, the court finds that without the information the officers discovered when they looked into or entered the motel room, the search warrant applications fail to establish probable cause to search either the
*858
motel room or Conner’s residence. The information in the warrant application for the motel room, prepared by Detective Polak, that is “wholly independent” of the illegal entry,
Estrada,
ii. The motivation prong.
The second prong of the “independent source” rule test is “whether ‘the agents’ decision to seek the warrant was prompted by what they had seen during the [illegal] entry.’ ”
Mithun,
In assessing motivation, the court must consider whether the officers would have applied for the search warrants if they had not looked into or entered the defendants’ motel room.
Estrada,
On this issue, the court concludes that the officers would not have sought either search warrant but for their illegal entry into the motel room. The government has conceded that the officers lacked probable cause when they first approached the motel room. Even if the officers had probable cause when Detective Iddings’s observation of coins on the windowsill is added in, the court finds that it was only after observing what the officers believed were the proceeds of the Uhlir bur
*859
glary
in the motel room
that the officers first thought to obtain the search warrants at issue here. Detective Iddings’s observations are not included in the search warrant applications. Therefore, the court concludes the search warrants also fail the second prong of the “independent source” test, because the applications for the warrants were specifically motivated by what the officers saw as the result of their illegal entry into the motel room.
See Mithun,
Because all of the evidence obtained by police following entry into the motel room, including the defendants’ statements, all evidence found in the motel room, and all evidence found at Conner’s residence, whether the evidence was obtained pursuant to a warrant or not, was not procured through an “independent source,” but was instead obtained in the illegal entry into the motel room or was tainted by that illegal entry, all such evidence must be suppressed.
IV. CONCLUSION
The court concludes that both of the defendants have standing to assert their claims of constitutional violations, because both possessed a reasonable expectation of privacy in Room 31 of the Elmdale Motel. The court concludes further that the evidence obtained in the entry into the motel room was obtained either at the wrong time or in the wrong way. First, the court concludes that entry into the room was gained in the wrong way, because Tilton opened the door to the motel in response to a show of official authority, not voluntarily or by consent.
The next significant flaw in the arrest of the defendants and seizure of evidence in this case is one of timing. Although the court finds that a law enforcement officer did not violate the Fourth Amendment by viewing objects on the windowsill within the room through the room’s window, the court has considerable doubt that those observations became part of the collective knowledge of the police officers present, because they were never communicated. Even with those observations considered as part of the collective knowledge of the officers, the court has considerable doubt that the officers had probable cause to arrest the defendants. The timing flaw, however, is that, assuming the officers had probable cause to arrest the defendants when the officers knocked on the motel room door, the court concludes that the officers erred by not waiting to obtain a warrant to effect the defendants’ arrest. The warrantless entiy into Room 31 was not justified by exigent circumstances, on either safety or destruction of evidence grounds. As a result, the conduct of the police in arresting the defendants within the motel room violated Payton and its progeny.
Again finding constitutional inadequacies in the way the arrest and searches were conducted in this case, the court concludes that because the method by which the police garnered the pivotal evidence supporting the search warrants was clearly illegal, under Leon and White all evidence obtained under the resulting warrants must be excluded notwithstanding the government’s assertion of the Leon good-faith exception. No objectively reasonable basis for believing the entry into the motel room complied with the law or the Fourth Amendment can be found here. Finally, the court concludes that the evidence found in the motel room and Conner’s residence was not procured through an independent source. Instead, all of the evidence obtained in this case after entry into the motel room, even evidence obtained pursuant to search warrants, was tainted by the illegal entry.
Therefore, the defendants’ motions to suppress are granted. All of the evidence against the defendants gained as a result of the initial illegal entry into the motel room, including statements made by the defendants, as well as the other fruits of the officers’ unconstitutional initial entry, is suppressed.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. For example, the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution provides as follows:
The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.
U.S. Const, amend. TV. Thus, the Constitution specifies that doing the right thing, effecting an arrest, must be done in the right way and only after certain prerequisites are met.
. The government unaccountably does not argue in the alternative that the evidence would be admissible under the “independent source rule" even if its argument for the applicability of the Leon "good-faith exception” fails.
. In its initial brief, the government asserted that the police had checked with the motel office prior to knocking on the door to Room 31, and had ascertained that Conner had rented the room. In its reply brief, the Government conceded that the registration information was obtained after the officers had entered Room 31 and arrested Tilton and Conner, but before the applications for the search warrants also at issue in this case were completed.
. Although there is conflicting testimony as to what Sergeant Young said, the court finds that what Sergeant Young said was, “Open up.” Such a statement is consistent with Sergeant Young’s initial testimony and the testimony of Wendie Oestmann. At the evidentiary hearing, Ms. Oestmann, the only neutral witness presented by any party, testified that she heard a police officer call out, "Open up.” Tr. at p. 109, 1.18-19. The court finds the testimony by Ms. Oestmann to be entirely credible on this point. The court has utilized the following factors in assessing the credibility of Ms. Oestmann and the other witnesses who testified at the evidentiary hearing: (1) the interest of the witness in the result of the hearing; (2) the witness’s relation to any party in interest; (3) the witness’s demeanor upon the witness stand; (4) the witness's manner of testifying; (5) the witness's tendency to speak truthfully or falsely, including the probability or improbability of the testimony given his or her situation to see and observe; (6) the witness's apparent capacity and willingness to tell truthful
*827
ly and accurately what he or she saw and observed; and (7) whether the witness's testimony is supported or contradicted by other evidence in the case.
See United States v. Phillips,
. Both of the Oestmanns described the officers’ knocking as “a heavy knock.” Tr. at p. 114. Detective Iddings referred to the officers' actions as “pounding.” Tr. at p. 87.
. Sergeant Young did not recognize Tilton when Tilton opened the motel room door. Sergeant Young, however, was familiar enough with Conner from prior, investigations to recognize him.
. From the testimony, the court concludes that Tilton did not see the drawn gun of one of the officers, but it would nonetheless have been readily apparent from what he did see that at least two and possibly more police officers were demanding that he open the door.
. In a civil commitment case, in which commitment also depends upon probable cause being apparent from the petition and certificates of psychiatrists, the court held that the rule requiring "at least minimal communication” was inapplicable, because there was no indication that the psychiatrists who signed certificates had read the petitions.
Villanova v. Abrams,
. As the court earlier noted, it is now well settled that Fourth Amendment protections apply to the registered occupant of a hotel or motel room.
See Hoffa,
. The court does not believe this conclusion is mere "hindsight.”
Cf. Ball,
. The government has not asserted, and the court cannot find, that the remaining category of "exigent circumstances,” the “hot pursuit” exception, applies here.
See, e.g., Olson,
. The Supreme Court granted certiorari and vacated this decision for reconsideration in light of
Bailey v. United States,
516 U.S.-,
. This approach is a logical application of the Supreme Court's holding in
Franks v. Delaware,
