Affirmed by published opinion. Judge NIEMEYER wrote the opinion, in which Chief Judge WILKINSON and Senior Judge HAMILTON joined.
Opinion
In this case, we must decide whether Dennis Gwinn’s partially clothed condition when arrested — without shoes and shirt— presented an exigency that justified police officers’ reentry into Gwinn’s trailer without a warrant to retrieve his boots and a shirt. The officers .had just completed a lawful entry and protective sweep of the trailer and were preparing to transport Gwinn to the regional jail.
The district court denied Gwinn’s motion made under the Fourth Amendment to suppress a gun found in his boots, applying a general standard of reasonableness. While we affirm the district court’s ruling, we reject its rationale and affirm on the basis that Gwinn’s partially clothed condition in the particular, circumstances of this case presented the police officers with an exigency justifying their reentry into the trailer and their temporary seizure of Gwinn’s boots without a warrаnt.
I
West Virginia State Police in Rainelle, West Virginia, responded to a 911 dispatch during the early evening hours of May 10, 1998, which indicated that “a domestic altercation [was] in progress on Backus Mountain Road [in Meadow Bridge, West Virginia] with weapons involved.” The 911 dispatcher had received a call from Anna Terry who stated:
[M]y daughter is living up there with a guy named Dennis Gwinn, and she just called me real fast and told me to call the police.... And she Jold me that he’s got a gun in there by the door and he told her he was going to kill her.
Terry also told the 911 dispatcher that her daughter had her baby yvith her.
State Trooper Ron Thomas was dispatched to respond to the call and was later joined by State Police Sergeant Scott Moore and another trooper. When Trooper Thomas arrived at 485 Backus Road, a remote location in Fayette County, he pulled his cruiser to within 25 yards of a small, “single-wide” trailer with a front porсh. He drew his weapon from its holster and yelled for Dennis Gwinn to come out. Gwinn exited the trailer, wearing only a pair of blue jeans. Trooper Thomas conducted a pat-down search of Gwinn, handcuffed him, and placed him in the back seat of his cruiser. Trooper Thomas then asked Gwinn “where his wife was at so. [Thomas] could speak to her.” Gwinn responded that the woman was his girlfriend, not his wife, and that she was inside the trailer.
Trooper Thomas then entered thе trailer — the door was open and the screen door shut — where he found Diane Harrah, crying and holding her baby. Sergeant Moore, who had just joined Trooper Thom *330 as, conducted a protective sweep of the trailer while Thomas questioned Harrah. Harrah reported that Gwinn was drunk and had prevented her from leaving the trailer. She related that Gwinn had gone to the bedroom, obtained a pistol, and brandished it, telling her that “if you try to leave, I’ll kill you.” Shе described the handgun as a blue-colored pistol but did not know where Gwinn had put it. She had last seen him with it in the living room. Trooper Thomas and Sergeant Moore searched for the handgun, but discovered instead a loaded shotgun under the couch. They failed to find the handgun.
The officers left the trailer, placed the shotgun in the trunk of Trooper Thomas’ cruiser, and prepared to transport Gwinn to the “regional jail.” Because Gwinn was wearing no sfiirt or shoes, Trooper Thomas went back into the trailer and said to Harrah, “Where’s his shoes? And we need to get a shirt for him.” Harrah directed Thomas to Gwinn’s boots in the living room, and she then went back to the bedroom to retrieve a shirt. While Har-rah was getting the shirt, Trooper Thomas picked up Gwinn’s mid-calf work boots, which “seemed awful[ly] heavy,” and heard something “flop inside.” When he opened the boot and looked inside, he discovered a pistol. He showed it to Harrah, and Har-rah identified it as the weapon with which Gwinn had threatened her earlier that evening.
Gwinn was charged as a felon in possession of a Smith & Wesson .38 caliber revolver and a Winchester 12-gauge shotgun, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 922. Gwinn moved to suppress the evidence of the two guns because they were obtained pursuant to a warrantless search. The district court granted the motion with respect to the shotgun and denied the motion with respect to the handgun. In denying Gwinn’s motion to suppress the .38 caliber handgun, the court concluded that “the second search and seizure indeed were proper based on the plain view doctrine.” The court, relying on
United States v. Jackson,
The Court finds two factors critical in concluding that Trooper Thomas acted reasonably in invading Mr. Gwinn’s privacy interest in his home. First, Trooper Thomas had lawfully entered Mr. Gwinn’s home earlier. As a result, Mr. Gwinn had a reduced expectation of privacy in the areas of his home where Officer Thomas lawfully had been. Second, Officer Thomas’ reentry was carefully circumscribed to minimize the intrusion. Officer Thomas asked Ms. Harrah to obtain a shirt for Mr. Gwinn, and he did not travel beyond the entryway to obtain shoes for Mr. Gwinn. Arguably, Officer Thomas could have asked Ms. Harrah to get shoes for Mr. Gwinn, as well, but the Court is not prepared to say that his decision to select the shoes and pick them up himself was unreasonable.
Gwinn pled guilty to the single-count indictment, reserving his right to appeal the district court’s ruling on his motion to suppress under Federal Rule of Criminal Procedurе 11(a)(2). The district court sentenced Gwinn to 37 months imprisonment. Gwinn filed this appeal, contending that Trooper Thomas’ seizure of the .38 caliber handgun violated his Fourth Amendment right to be free from unreasonable searches and seizures.
II
Gwinn contends that the district court erred in two respects in denying his motion to suppress the evidence of the .38 *331 caliber handgun: (1) the district court applied an incorrect legal standard to justify Trooper Thomas’ reentry into Gwinn’s trailer to retrieve his boots and shirt, and the reentry was not justified by any recognized exception to the warrant requirement; and (2) the plain view doctrine cannot justify Trooper Thomas’ seizure of the handgun because its incriminating character was not “immediately apparent,” since “only after the trooper opened the boot and visually examined its contents did it become apparent that a revolver was present therein.” At oral argument, Gwinn’s able counsel clarified and refined Gwinn’s position with respect to the seizure, arguing that Trooper Thomas’ seizure of the boots containing the handgun was illegal; he conceded that if the boots were properly seized, the trooper was entitled to assure that they did not contain weapons or contraband before giving them to Gwinn while he was in lawful custody.
The government maintains that Trooper Thomas’ reentry into the trailer was justified by the exigent circumstances created by a need “to protect defendant by providing appropriate basic clothing” and that Trooper Thomas’ reentry and seizure of the boots was justified by the apparent consent of Diane Harrah, who originally called for police help and who directed Trooper Thomas to the boots.
We review the district court’s findings of historical facts for clear error.
See Ornelas v. United States,
We begin by noting that Trooper Thomas and Sergeant Moore’s initial entry into the trailer following Gwinn’s arrest and their protective sweep of the trailer comported with established principles of Fourth Amendment jurisprudence.
See Maryland v. Buie,
There is no claim by Gwinn, nor is there any suggestion from the record, that *332 Trooper Thomas’ reentry into the trailer was a pretext or was for any purpose other than securing clothing for Gwinn. This purpose is bоrne out by the fact that Trooper Thomas did not proceed past the livingroom area, where he announced to Harrah the need to retrieve Gwinn’s shoes and a shirt. And when Harrah directed Trooper Thomas to Gwinn’s boots in the corner, Thomas immediately proceeded to their location and picked them up. It was only after Trooper Thomas picked up the boots that he discovered the pistol, which, after confirming that it was thе one brandished by Gwinn, he seized.
The Fourth Amendment protects “[t]he right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures.” U.S. Const, amend. IV. It has been construed to mean that “[ajbsent exigent circumstances, [the] threshold [of one’s house] may not reasonably be crossed without a warrant.”
Payton v. New York,
In applying these principles, therefore, we must determine whether Trooper Thomas’ reentry into Gwinn’s trailer to retrieve shoes and a shirt for Gwinn falls within an exception to the Fourth Amendment’s warrant requirement.
First, the district court appropriately concluded that Trooper Thomas’ reentry into Gwinn’s trailer was not justified by consent. Gwinn did not request that Trooper Thomas retrieve his clothes, and Thomas did not ask Harrah, who was in the trailer, for permission to reenter. But the court also concluded that exigent circumstances to justify Gwinn’s reentry did not exist. The court explained that Gwinn was “wearing enough clothing to satisfy standards of public decency, and the defendant was arrested on May 10, 1998, when it certainly is possible to go outside without a shirt or shoes.” After rejecting the generally accepted exceptions to the warrant requirement, the court upheld the warrantless еntry, applying a general reasonableness standard and concluding that Trooper Thomas’ “justification for entering Mr. Gwinn’s home” outweighed “Mr. Gwinn’s privacy interests.”
We agree with Gwinn’s assertion that the district court erred by applying a general reasonableness test to justify a warrantless search of a home. While the Fourth Amendment proscribes only
“unreasonable
searches and seizures,” the search of a home “without a warrant is
per se
unreasonable, unless the police сan show ... the presence of ‘exigent circumstances.’”
Coolidge v. New Hampshire,
Gwinn was arrested in a remote area in Fayette County, West Virginia, during the evening hours in early May. At the time of his arrest, he was wearing only blue jeans. The interest served by requiring him to put on shoes and a shirt was more than “the desire of law enforcement officers to complete the arrestee^ wardrobe.”
United States v. Butler,
We join the Second and Tenth Circuits in concluding that under circumstances similar to those in this case, an officer is authorized to take reasonable steps to address the safety of the arrestee and that the arrestee’s partially clothed status may constitute an exigency justifying the officer’s temporary reеntry into the arrestee’s home to retrieve clothes reasonably calculated to lessen the risk of injury to the defendant. In
Di Stefano,
the Second Circuit concluded that police officers had “a duty to find clothing for [an arrestee in their custody] to wear or to permit [the arrestee] to do so.”
In circumstances very similar to those presented here, the Tenth Circuit in
Butler
held that police officers’ entry into a trailеr to retrieve shoes for the defendant fit the exigency exception for a warrant-less search. Because the officers there noticed broken glass on the ground in the area where the arrest had been made, requiring Butler to walk in his bare feet “would have posed a serious risk to his health.”
Butler,
In applying a сlothing exigency exception to the warrant requirement in this case, we rely on numerous factors that were present.
First,
Trooper Thomas was
*334
presented with an objective need to protect Gwinn against the substantial risk of injury to his feet and of chill in the absence' of a shirt.
Second,
there was no evidence or even a claim that Trooper Thomas’ reasons for reentering the trailer were pretextual.
Third,
the intrusion into Gwinn’s trailer was slight and temporary, particularly in light of the fact that the officers had only moments before lawfully been in the trailer to ensure the safety of Harrah and her baby and had neither completed their business at the site nor left it.
Fourth,
the intrusion was strictly limited to the purpose of retrieving shoes and clothing.
Fifth,
the purpose of the reentry and seizure of the boots was not to serve a governmental interest, but to ensure Gwinn’s reasonable safety while he was in the government’s custody. Indeed, for that reason it is doubtful whethеr Trooper Thomas’ actions in retrieving the boots to hand them to Gwinn would have constituted a “meaningful interference” with Gwinn’s possessory interests in the boots so as to even constitute a seizure.
United States v. Jacobsen,
In applying the “clothing exception” to this case, we derive some support from the Supreme Court’s holding in
Cady v. Dombrowski,
In the case before us, Trooper Thomas had legally entered Gwinn’s trailer and was in the process of completing his tasks incident to Gwinn’s arrest before leaving the site. He thus had legally exercised custody and control over the trailer, and his temporary departure from the trailer to place the discovered shotgun in the trunk surely left him with “a form of custody or control” of the trailer, not unlike that described in
Cady,
While we recognize this case presents circumstances distinct from
Cady, Cady’s,
“community caretaking” rationale nevertheless provides some support for the clothing exception that we apply.
Although it is difficult to suppose that the circumstances of this case would require Trooper Thomаs to seek out a magistrate to obtain a warrant authorizing his temporary reentry into the trailer to retrieve Gwinn’s clothes, we nevertheless caution against using a clothing exception
*335
as a cover for entries made for other purposes. We must reiterate that an essential premise for our application of the exception here is the fact that nothing in the record suggests that Trooper Thomas’ reason for the reentry was pretextual or that he acted in bad faith. We also note that, in invoking the clothing exception to the warrant requirement, the government bears the burden of demonstrating particularly that the arrestee had a substantial need for the clothing and that the government’s response was limited strictly to meeting that need.
Cf. Welsh v. Wisconsin,
Having found that, in the exigent circumstances presented by this case, Trooper Thomas was justified in reentering Gwinn’s trailer and retrieving his boots without a warrant, it follows that the search of the boots themselves did not violate the Fourth Amendment. Police officers are clearly justified in searching any item before they give it to a person in their custody to protect their safety and deny the person contrabаnd.
See United States v. Ricks,
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the district court’s ruling that denied Gwinn’s motion to suppress the evidence of the .38 caliber Smith & Wesson pistol that formed the basis for his conviction.
AFFIRMED
