UNITED STATES of America, Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
Dwight Timothy SCOTT, Defendant-Appellant.
UNITED STATES of America, Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
Rufus WILLIAMS, Defendant-Appellant.
UNITED STATES of America, Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
Ronnie HOLLOMAN, Defendant-Appellant.
UNITED STATES of America, Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
Marion C. TUCKER, Defendant-Appellant.
Nos. 74-1373 to 74-1376
United States Court of Appeals,
Ninth Circuit.
Feb. 21, 1975.
As Modified on Denial of Rehearing and Rehearing En Banc
July 10, 1975.
Richard M. Grossberg (argued), San Diego, Cal., Matthew N. Lees (argued in 74-1375), San Diego, Cal., for defendants-appellants.
Matthew T. Kissane, Asst. U. S. Atty., San Diego, Cal., for plaintiff-appellee.
OPINION
Before MERRILL and TRASK, Circuit Judges, and FERGUSON* District Judge.
MERRILL, Circuit Judge:
On this appeal from a conviction under 18 U.S.C. § 2113(a) for bank robbery appellants assign as error denial of their motion to suppress evidence obtained in a warrantless search of an apartment and the subsequent introduction of such evidence at trial.
On September 7, 1973, at approximately 2:05 p.m., a branch of the Security Pacific National Bank in National City, California, was robbed by four male blacks armed with a sawed-off shotgun and revolvers. Local police promptly arrived and were advised by witnesses that the robbers were last seen driving a blue Chevrolet, the partial license number of which had been obtained. Ten minutes after the robbery the suspect getaway car was located. It was ascertained to have been stolen. A paper bag containing shotgun shells was found on the floor on the passenger side. The roadway showed tire marks indicating that another car had recently left the area under high acceleration, and this suggested to the officers that the robbers had switched cars. Similar tire marks were found on two successive street intersections leading away from the apparent switch point, at the last of which witnesses had observed a bronze colored car the partial license number of which had been obtained. The car had been occupied by blacks and had been travelling at a high rate of speed. Proceeding in the direction indicated the officers found other witnesses who had seen a bronze car occupied by blacks travelling at high speed. The trail led to a parking lot at the rear of a two-story apartment building containing approximately twenty apartment units opening onto and surrounding a courtyard. In the parking lot a bronze colored car was found at 2:45 p.m. The partial license numbers matched. The hood was warm to the touch indicating that the car had recently been driven. Witnesses previously interviewed were brought to the lot and picked out the car as the one they had seen travelling at high speed. Agents of the FBI, already summoned to the bank, were then summoned to the apartment house.
Other than the apartment house, the buildings nearest the parking lot were several "private houses" some 30 to 50 feet distant from the lot. One of the local officers present regarded the apartment house as a haven for law violators. At the hearing on the motion to suppress he testified: "Within the last year and a half I have made seven felony arrests out of this complex; armed robbery, burglary, purse snatching. It is noted to be predominantly black. Maybe two families, a husband and wife-type family in the complex. The rest are single adults. There is one white family that lives in the complex, but I don't recall which apartment it is". Another local officer who was present at the scene later testified that he had no knowledge of complaints concerning unauthorized parking in the lot at the rear of the apartment house. One FBI agent testified at the hearing on the motion to suppress that on his way to the apartment house he heard on his car radio that a witness had seen four blacks leave the car in the lot and enter the courtyard of the apartment. The identity of the witness, the source of the broadcast, or the person who made the broadcast was never ascertained.
With the attention of the officers thus centered on the apartment house, the officers commenced searching the apartments. Apartments 2 and 3 were known to a local officer as each being occupied by three to four adult male blacks. These apartments were searched without result. The same officer knew that apartments 1 and 5 were occupied by the manager and assistant manager. The manager, on inquiry from FBI, informed the agents that five of the remaining apartments were occupied by adult male blacks. A search of these apartments was begun on descending order of apartment number. Four of these apartments were searched; entrance was gained to one of them by use of the manager's pass key when knocking at the door brought no response.
At approximately 3:45 p.m. apartment 7 remained as the last unsearched apartment said to be occupied by adult male blacks and the attention of all in the courtyard focused on this apartment. For two minutes or longer agents knocked loudly and loudly announced their identity and desire to speak to the occupants. No response was received. The manager's pass key was obtained. One officer testified that at this point he "heard noises from the interior scuffling noises." The agents then entered by pass key. Appellants were found hiding there. Evidence was found and seized. This evidence was the subject of the motion to suppress.
The district court denied the motion to suppress on the theory that this case presented an instance of "hot pursuit" and that search of apartment 7 was, therefore, proper under Warden v. Hayden,
Under Warden v. Hayden the exigencies of hot pursuit can in proper circumstances excuse lack of warrant. See, e. g., United States v. Shye,
The exigencies of hot pursuit cannot, however, excuse lack of probable cause. See Wong Sun v. United States,
The question, then, is whether the officers at apartment 7 had, at the time of entry, probable cause to believe that the fugitives they sought were there; whether, with action frozen at that moment, a warrant could properly have been issued for search of the apartment. In our judgment it could. There was reasonable cause to believe that the fugitives had entered the apartment complex. There was knowledge that they were not present in 6 of the 7 units most likely to be their objectives.1 Apartment 7 then remained as the most likely choice. There was cause to believe that it was occupied and that the occupant or occupants did not wish to admit their presence.
The same circumstances excuse the noncompliance by the federal officers with 18 U.S.C. § 3109 and by the state officers with Cal.Penal Code § 844 (West 1970), see Miller v. United States,
We conclude that the warrantless search was proper. The evidence thus obtained was sufficient to sustain the conviction of each of the four appellants.
Judgment affirmed.
FERGUSON* District Judge (dissenting):
I must respectfully dissent. Justice Fortas used the term "hot pursuit" to summarize the kind of circumstance discussed by the majority in Warden v. Hayden. See
In Hayden, a cab driver was robbed, and two other drivers followed the robber to a house. The location was communicated to the police, who went immediately to the house, announced themselves, and asked the woman who answered the door if they could search the house for the suspect. The woman did not object, so the officers spread throughout the house looking for the suspect. At approximately the time when the robber was found upstairs, one officer found guns in a toilet, and another found clothes similar to those worn by the robber, stuffed into a washing machine downstairs.
The crucial question was whether the guns and clothes were legally seized, since they were found in a broad search made without a search warrant. The Supreme Court found the search to have been permissible, since it was the only way for the officers to proceed to find the man whom they had probable cause to arrest for the crime. Permitting this kind of search also allowed the officers to maximize their safety, by assuring that there were no other people or weapons in the house to threaten them as they sought the suspect. See
The thrust of the majority opinion was that in such a situation, when the police were hot on the trail of the suspected perpetrator, and had probable cause to arrest him, they were entitled to one of the few, very limited, exceptions to the requirement that all searches be conducted pursuant to a warrant. The decision in no way related to, or reduced, the probable cause requirement for arresting a suspect or for searching a house. The phrase "hot pursuit" has therefore been misused when it has been read to imply that the legal standard for arrest or search is somehow diminished when the police are chasing right behind a suspect.
Making the abuse of the phrase even worse is the occasional practice of finding a "hot pursuit" any time that the police trace a suspect through an investigative process uninterrupted by any substantial period of time. See United States v. Mitchell,
These last questions would be no more than rhetorical if there weren't the possibility that the phrase "hot pursuit" will somehow be converted into a doctrine far exceeding its original meaning. As discussed earlier, the Hayden doctrine does no more than allow a fairly broad search while seeking a suspect in order to arrest him. Yet here we have the majority invoking the doctrine when the breadth of the search was not in issue at all. All of the contested evidence was in plain view, either in the open or in the closet with one of the hiding suspects. The issue in this case is not the legality of a search, but rather the legality of the entry in order to arrest. In other words, did the officers have probable cause to arrest whoever was in apartment 7? It's hard to understand why the "hot pursuit" notion comes into play at all.
My fear is that it's somehow being used to dilute the notion of probable cause, possibly signaling a regression from a constitutional/historical view of the Fourth Amendment to a "pragmatic" one which gives the government excessive power. See Chimel v. California,
I must add in passing that I am troubled by the majority's easy acceptance of the officers' search of the six other black-leased apartments.1 Although appellants here clearly do not meet the standing requirements set forth in Brown v. United States,
The resolution of the standing question is, of course, not necessary to this dissent, since, even assuming the legality of the searches, there was no probable cause for the entry and arrest. Accordingly, I would reverse.
Notes
Honorable Warren J. Ferguson, United States District Judge, Central District of California, sitting by designation
The record does not reveal the circumstances under which the officers secured admission to the apartments entered other than the one entered by passkey. However, even assuming impropriety, appellants lack standing to complain of the intrusion. Such would have been the rule had incriminating evidence been seized. See Brown v. United States,
Honorable Warren J. Ferguson, United States District Judge, Central District of California, sitting by designation
The record does not make clear whether consent was obtained for any of these searches, but appellees concede that at least one of the apartments other than that in which appellants were found was entered by means of the passkey. So, at least one of the six searches which supposedly created probable cause for the arrests herein was accomplished without a warrant, consent, or probable cause
