We are called upon today to consider certain important questions of Fourth Amendment law. 1 After a trial by jury, Edward Mapp, also known as Sonny Woods, was convicted on three counts of violating federal narcotics laws, 21 U.S. C. §§ 841(a)(1), 841(b)(1)(A) and 846. Count 1 of a five count indictment charged Mapp, Alan Simmons, Linda Walters, Robert Clark and Robert Davis with conspiracy to distribute, and possess with intent to distribute heroin (the “conspiracy” count). Count 2 charged Mapp and Simmons with the sale of 14.82 grams of heroin on May 25, 1972 (the “sale” count). Count 4 charged Mapp, Walters and Clark with possession of approximately two kilograms of heroin on June 21, 1972 (the “possession” count). 2 Mapp was sen- *69 fenced to seven years imprisonment, to be followed by three years special parole, on each count, sentences to run concurrently. 3
The search and seizure here involved were conducted in the absence of a search warrant. Prior to trial, the district judge held a hearing on the defendants’ motions to suppress two kilograms of heroin seized from the defendant Walters’s apartment on June 21, by the Joint Task Force agents who made the arrests in this case. The district judge denied the motion to suppress and the evidence was admitted at trial against the defendants, including appellant Mapp. The only issue on this appeal, brought by Mapp alone, is whether the search and seizure here involved was consistent with the Fourth Amendment and, if not, whether Mapp’s conviction on all three counts must be reversed. We conclude that the search violated the Fourth Amendment and that the evidence seized during the search should have been suppressed. But, for the reasons discussed below, we reverse only as to the “possession” and “conspiracy” counts and remand for resentencing. Mapp’s conviction on the “sale” count is affirmed.
I.
Inasmuch as the sufficiency of the government’s proof at trial is not challenged in these proceedings, we need not catalogue all the evidence which may have led the jury to conclude that the appellant was guilty of the crimes charged. It is sufficient to indicate at this stage that a skillful investigation by the New York Joint Task Force, involving intensive surveillance and the use of an undercover agent, disclosed that Edward Mapp was heavily engaged in the sale of narcotics in New York City. The facts, as narrated by Patrolman John Crowe of the Task Force at the suppression hearing, follow.
On May 17, 1972, Detective Octavio Pons, a New York City Police Officer acting as an undercover agent for the New York Joint Task Force, purchased heroin from Alan Simmons. Late in the evening, on May 24, Pons and Simmons met again, and drove to Sterling's Den Lounge, a bar in the Bronx. Unaware that he and Pons were being observed by Patrolman Crowe, Simmons entered the bar and emerged shortly thereafter with the appellant, Edward Mapp. After a few moments, Mapp instructed Pons to follow him. Mapp drove his own vehicle to the vicinity of 1925 Monterrey Avenue, arriving there, followed by Pons and Simmons, at approximately 12:15 A.M. on the morning of May 25. Simmons asked Pons for $1300, which Pons handed to him. Simmons counted the money and gave it to Mapp, who then entered the apartment building at 1925 Monterrey Avenue. Simmons then told Pons that Mapp had “taught him everything he knew about the narcotics business” and that Mapp was Simmons’s “connection.” Approximately fifteen minutes later, Mapp emerged from the building, walked to Pons’s car, threw two envelopes into Simmons’s lap, and departed. Simmons gave Pons one of the envelopes, which Pons and Patrolman Crowe field-tested later in the day. The officers’ test indicated that the envelope contained heroin, an evaluation subsequently confirmed by laboratory analysis.
*70 Surveillance was continued on Mapp by Task Force agents on at least eight occasions between May 25 and June 21. Although the investigation revealed that Mapp did not live at the Monterrey Avenue address, 4 he was frequently observed entering the building between the hours of 9:30 P.M. and 1:30 A.M., often after making a tour of neighborhood bars in the Bronx where he had met with Simmons. Generally, Mapp arrived at 1925 Monterrey Avenue alone, and emerged between five and fifteen minutes later. On at least one occasion, however, Mapp was accompanied by an unidentified man; both entered the apartment building and remained there for a brief period of time.- The unidentified individual exited first, “returned to his auto, sat down behind the driver’s wheel . . . bent forward and then sat back straight and drove off,” conduct which could be construed to indicate that the unidentified male may have placed something under his seat.
Shortly after midnight on the morning of June 21, 1972, appellant left a bar in the Bronx and drove to 1925 Monterrey Avenue. Mapp, who was carrying a brown paper bag, approximately the size of a shopping bag, was followed into the building by Investigator John Herritage. He saw Mapp greet Mrs. Linda Walters in the hallway of the building and accompany her to the doorway of apartment 1-F. Mapp then asked her, “Where’s the gangster,” and she replied, “He’ll be here shortly.” Mapp and Mrs. Walters entered apartment 1-F and locked the door from the inside. Investigator Herritage relayed this information to Crowe, who was in the street at the time conducting surveillance. Approximately ten minutes later, at 1:10 A.M., Mapp emerged from the building, empty-handed. He entered his automobile, and drove one block, when he was stopped by Task Force agents and arrested.
At approximately 2:00 A.M., Crowe, Herritage, agents of the Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs and uniformed New York City policemen, six in all, entered 1925 Monterrey Avenue and knocked on the door of apartment 1-F. From the rear of the apartment a male voice inquired who was at the door and one of the patrolmen shouted that it was the police. The peephole was opened from inside and then closed. The officers heard “rapid footsteps to the rear of the apartment and then sounds of several footsteps from the rear of the apartment.” After waiting for one or two minutes the officers broke down the door. Robert Clark, who was standing near the doorway, was immediately arrested. Crowe, with his gun drawn, entered the bedroom, observed Linda Walters in her nightclothes, and said, “You are under arrest and we want the package that Sonny 5 brought in earlier.” Mrs. Walters pointed to a bedroom closet. A subsequent search of the closet revealed a brown paper bag containing two kilograms of heroin.
II.
Mapp does not question the validity of his arrest on June 21, nor of the admission against him of the heroin sold and delivered by him to Detective Pons on May 25. His argument, rather, is leveled against the search of Linda Walters’s apartment on June 21 and the admission at trial of evidence seized, as he urges, in violation of the Fourth Amendment. He contends also that the two kilograms of heroin taken from Mrs. Walters’s apartment and admitted for purposes of the “possession” and “conspiracy” counts, had a “spill-over” effect on the “sale” count. 6 Mapp argues, therefore, that if the evidence was inadmissible on the “possession” and “eon *71 spiracy” counts, his conviction on all three counts should be reversed.
Concisely stated the appellant’s position is that the Task Force agents did not have probable cause to arrest the occupants of apartment 1-F; that even if there was probable cause to arrest, the agents were required to secure a warrant before effecting a nighttime arrest in a dwelling; that even if the warrant-less entry was otherwise legal, it became unlawful as a result of the failure of the officers to announce both their identity and purpose prior to entry; and, finally, that even if the initial entry and arrest were valid, the subsequent search was unlawful because conducted without a search warrant. We shall consider these arguments in order, after a preliminary inquiry into the problem of standing.
A. Standing
The government did not challenge Mapp’s standing to raise the Fourth Amendment issue at the suppression hearing, nor did it do so in its brief on appeal. Indeed, at oral argument, when the issue was first raised by the Court, the government conceded that under traditional principles of standing Mapp properly had asserted the Fourth Amendment claim. Nevertheless, we believe a brief comment on this rather complex question is appropriate at this time and may be of some aid to district judges.
The Assistant United States Attorney frankly acknowledged that Mapp was the target of the search in this case. There is language in Jones v. United States,
In order to qualify as a “person aggrieved by unlawful search and seizure” one must have been a victim of a search or seizure, one against whom the search was directed, as distinguished from one who claims prejudice only through the use of evidence gathered as a consequence of a search or seizure directed at someone else.
[T]o hold that petitioner’s failure to acknowledge interest in the narcotics or the premises prevented his attack upon the search, would be to permit the Government to have the advantage of contradictory positions as a basis for conviction. Petitioner’s conviction flows from his possession of the narcotics at the time of the search. Yet the fruits of that search, upon which the conviction depends, were admitted into evidence on the ground that petitioner did not have possession of the narcotics at that time. The prosecution here thus subjected the defendant to the penalties meted out to one in lawless possession while refusing him the remedies designed for one in that situation. It is not consonant with the amenities, to put it mildly, of the administration of criminal justice to sanction such squarely contradictory assertions of power by the Government.
Id.
at 263-264,
B. Probable Cause
Since one theory upon which the government relies to justify the warrantless search of Mrs. Walters’s apartment is that the search was conducted incident to her arrest, the legality of that arrest is necessarily called into question. We conclude that there was ample probable cause to arrest. Mapp had been linked to the sale of narcotics as early as May 25, when Detective Pons purchased heroin from Simmons and Mapp. Simmons informed Pons at that time that Mapp was his “connection.” After Pons gave Mapp $1300 for the heroin, Mapp went into the apartment building at 1925 Monterrey Avenue, emerged shortly thereafter, and delivered two envelopes containing heroin to Detective Pons. On numerous occasions between May 25 and June 21, the date of arrest, Mapp was seen entering the building at 1925 Monterrey Avenue at odd hours of the evening, and early morning, always for brief periods of time. It was more than reasonable for the officers to believe that Mapp was using an apartment in the building as a heroin stash; all that was left for experienced officers to determine was the precise number of the apartment. 10
At approximately 1:00 A.M. on June 21, 1972, Mapp entered 1925 Monterrey Avenue carrying a brown paper bag, and was met in the hallway by Mrs. Walters. As we have indicated, Mapp said, “Where’s the gangster,” and Mrs. Walters replied, “He’ll be here shortly.” Investigator Herritage had astutely followed Mapp into the building and observed him and Mrs. Walters entering apartment 1-F. Mapp left the apartment at approximately 1:10 A.M. without the package. Under the circumstances, the officers could justifiably have believed that Mapp had left heroin in the apartment and that the occupant or occupants were assisting Mapp in his criminal activities. All the information then available to the Task Force agents gave them more than ample probable cause to arrest.
C. The Warrantless Arrest
Although, as a general rule, officers may arrest without a warrant upon probable cause to believe that a felony has been or is being committed
see e. g.,
18 U.S.C. § 3052, it remains “a grave
*74
constitutional question . . . whether the forceful nighttime, entry into a dwelling to arrest a person reasonably believed within, upon probable cause that he had committed a felony, under circumstances where no reason appears why an arrest warrant could not have been sought, is consistent with the Fourth Amendment.” Jones v. United States,
Nevertheless, the circumstances of this case permit us to leave resolution of this question for another day, as other panels of this Court have done.
See
Williams v. United States,
D. Failure to Announce Purpose
Mapp argues that even assuming
arguendo
that there was probable cause and the arrest without a warrant was valid, the forcible entry, accompanied by a breaking down of the door to Mrs. Walters’s apartment, was not preceded by the proper announcement. 18 U.S.C. § 3109 provides that an “officer may break open any outer or inner door or window of a house ... to execute a search warrant, if, after notice of his authority and purpose, he is refused admittance or when necessary to liberate
*75
himself or a person aiding him in the execution of a warrant.”
11
At least since Miller v. United States,
Even if probable cause exists for the arrest of a person within, the Fourth Amendment is violated by an unannounced police intrusion into a private home, with or without an arrest warrant, except
(1) where the persons within already know of the officers’ authority and purpose, or
(2) where the officers are justified in the belief that persons within are in imminent peril of bodily harm, or
(3) where those within, made aware of the presence of someone outside (because, for example, there has been a knock at the door) are then engaged in activity which justifies the officers in the belief that an escape or the destruction of evidence is being attempted.
Id.,
at 47,
In the instant case, the officers announced their identity but did not state their purpose. We conclude, however, that the facts here fall within the third exception to the rule articulated by Mr. Justice Brennan in Ker, supra. After knocking and announcing their identity, the officers waited one or two minutes’ for the door to open. They heard rapid footsteps in the rear of the apartment. Under the circumstances, the officers could reasonably have believed that persons within the apartment were effecting the destruction of evidence. Accordingly, the forcible entry, after announcement of identity but without announcement of purpose, was justified.
E. The Arrest and Search
We have succeeded in tracing the steps of the Task Force agents into the Walters apartment and have concluded that, at least until that point, the officers had acted wholly within the command of the Fourth Amendment. We briefly recapitulate the subsequent events. Upon breaking down the door to apartment 1-F the officers encountered Robert Clark and immediately placed *76 him under arrest. Patrolman Crowe, upon entering the bedroom, came upon Mrs. Walters in nightclothes and robe. He said to her, with his gun in hand, “You are under arrest and we want the package that Sonny brought in earlier.” Mrs. Walters pointed to a closet located in the bedroom. Crowe opened the closet door, saw a brown paper bag with a light manila envelope protruding from the side. There were three such envelopes which Crowe turned over to the custodian of evidence. Only then did Crowe inform Mrs. Walters of her Miranda rights. Investigator Herritage entered the bedroom, looked in the closet and found a fourth manila envelope in the closet. Subsequent chemical analysis indicated that the envelopes contained two kilograms of heroin.
It is conceded that the search here in question was conducted without the authorization of a warrant. But, “the most basic constitutional rule in that [Fourth Amendment] area is that ‘searches conducted outside the judicial process, without prior approval by judge or magistrate, are
per se
unreasonable under the Fourth Amendment — subject only to a few specifically established and well-delineated exceptions.’ The exceptions are ‘jealously and carefully drawn,’ and there must be ‘a showing by those who seek exemption . . . that the exigencies of the situation made that course imperative.’ ‘The burden is on those seeking exemption to show the need for it.’ ” Coolidge v. New Hampshire,
supra,
Absent a warrant, the government assumes the burden of persuasion that at least one of the narrow exceptions to the Fourth Amendment warrant requirement applies to this case. The Government does not here suggest that a warrant was not needed because the officers were engaged in “hot pursuit,” Warden v. Hayden,
1. Consent
Although each case must turn on its own facts,
see e. g.
United States v. Gaines,
At the threshold, one question requires consideration. We have noted that no warnings of any kind were given by the Task Force agents to Mrs. Walters before she allegedly consented to the search of her bedroom closet despite the fact that she had already been placed under arrest. There have been, at the very least, hints or suggestions in the legal literature that a variant of the
Miranda
warnings,
Turning, however, to the circumstances of this case, and applying the general legal waiver principles discussed above, we cannot agree that there was here consent, “unequivocal, specific and intelligently given,” United States v. Smith,
The Task Force agents entered Mrs. Walters’s apartment at approximately two o’clock in the morning, after break *78 ing down the door. Patrolman Crowe testified that he entered the apartment with his gun unholstered and that the gun was in his hand at the time he arrested Mrs. Walters. Mrs. Walters was dressed in a housecoat, with nightclothes on underneath it. Crowe stated that she looked “alarmed” when he entered the room. There were, according to the testimony, five or six officers in the apartment at the time Mrs. Walters “consented” to the search.
Under these extraordinary circumstances — a gun in hand, a breaking down of the door, an arrest, the hour (2:00 A.M.), the place (her bedroom)— the officers’ failure to warn Mrs. Walters, after placing her under arrest, of her right to remain silent or to withhold consent to a search, takes on special significance. Although we do not hold that whenever a defendant has been taken into custody, law enforcement officials must warn the accused of his right to withhold consent to a search, we are also not required to ignore the observations made in
Miranda
concerning the relationship between custody, coercion and consent.
Miranda
noted that “the process of in-custody interrogation of persons suspected or accused of crime contains inherently compelling pressures which work to undermine the individual’s will . . . . ”
Mrs. Walters was undeniably in custody when Patrolman Crowe entered her bedroom, with gun in hand, and announced to her that she was under arrest. Then, without advising her of her rights, and without taking even minimal Steps to establish an atmosphere of relative calm somewhat more conducive to the making of a knowing and intelligent decision, he stated, “We want the package that Sonny left earlier.” Although the district judge, in ruling on the motion to suppress, believed the latter expression amounted only to a statement, and not a question, and that Mrs. Walters’s response constituted a voluntary act of consent to the search, we cannot accept this view of the facts. We conclude that the statement here in question was an outright demand — without ifs, ands or buts — and the voluntariness of the “consent” that followed must be measured in light of that demand.
“[A]rrest carries its own aura of coercion [and] the burden upon the government to show voluntary consent is ‘particularly heavy.’ ” Gorman v. United States,
2. Search Incident to Arrest
Inasmuch as the search in this ease cannot be justified on the consent principle relied upon by the district judge, the government advances the alternative argument on appeal that the search was justified because it was incident to a lawful arrest. The history of this doctrine has been inconsistent, to say the least, and its oscillations have been frequently charted
see, e. g.,
Chimel v. California,
supra,
When an arrest is made, it is reasonable for the arresting officer to search the person arrested in order to remove any weapons that the latter might seek to use in order to resist arrest or effect his escape. Otherwise the officer’s safety might well be endangered, and the arrest itself frustrated. In addition, it is entirely reasonable for the arresting officer to search for and seize any evidence on the arrestee’s person in order to prevent its concealment or destruction.
And the area into which an arrestee might reach in order to grab a weapon or evidentiary items must, of course, be governed by a like rule. A gun on a table or in a drawer in front of one who is arrested can be as dangerous to the arresting officer as one concealed in the clothing of the person arrested. There is ample justification, therefore, for a search of the arrestee’s person and the area “within his immediate control” — construing that phrase to mean the area from within which he might gain possession of a weapon or destructible evidence.
Chimel v. California,
supra,
At the outset we dispose of the notion that
Chimel’s
“immediate control” test permits law enforcement agents to search the entire room in which an arrest takes place, without regard to whether, in the literal sense, the area searched was one “into which an arrestee might reach in order to grab a weapon or evidentiary items. . . .” Although the search in
Chimel
extended throughout the three-bedroom house, including the attic, garage, and small workshop,
id.
at 754,
It would be possible, of course, to draw a line between Rabinowitz [United States v. Rabinowitz,339 U. S. 56 ,70 S.Ct. 430 ,94 L.Ed. 653 (1950)] and Harris [Harris v. United States,331 U.S. 145 ,67 S.Ct. 1098 ,91 L.Ed. 1399 (1947)] on the one hand, and this case on the other. For Rabinowitz involved a single room, and Harris a four-room apartment, while in the case before us an entire house was searched. But such a distinction would be highly artificial. No consideration relevant to the Fourth Amendment suggests any point of rational limitation, once the search is allowed to go beyond the area from which the person arrested might obtain weapons or evidentiary items. The only reasoned distinction is one between a search of the person arrested and the area within his reach on the one hand, and more extensive searches on the other.
Id.
at 766,
The record in this case reveals that the closet in which the heroin packages were found was closed at the time of search. Thus, the only justification for the search, absent a warrant, is that the closet was within the area of Mrs. Walters’s “immediate control,” within the meaning of Chimel. Officer Crowe testified, however, that he was standing between Mrs. Walters and the closet at the time he asked her for the package which Mapp had left earlier. At the time the demand was made, there were five or six officers in the one bedroom apartment, certainly more than sufficient manpower to prevent Mrs. Walters from reaching the closet. Unless Mrs. Walters were either an acrobat or a Houdini, see Hall, Kamisar, La Fave and Israel, Modern Criminal Procedure, 1972 Supplement 66, we cannot conceive how the closet could have fallen within the area of her immediate control. To say that the closet was an area into which she was able to reach, despite the fact that an armed officer stood between her and it, would, in effect, be to hold that a search of all the enclosed places in Mrs. Walters’s bedroom would have been consistent with the Fourth Amendment — a result explicitly foreclosed by Chimel. Accordingly, we cannot say, based on the objective facts in the record, that the closet was within Mrs. Walters’s area of immediate control within the meaning of Chimel.
Nor did the officers here involved point to any articulable reasons leading them to believe that Mrs. Walters was an especially dangerous person against whom extraordinary protective measures may have been required, or that the search was actually an attempt to secure an area which the officers, in good faith, subjectively believed was within Mrs. Walters’s area of immediate control. Such a contention would have been inconsistent, to say the least, with the fact that the officers did not even attempt to search Mrs. Walters or the area that was objectively within her immediate control when they arrested her. Moreover, as we have indicated, after finding the package which Mapp had left in the apartment, the officers proceeded to search the entire apartment for other evidence. Thus, absent even the barest hint that these Task Force agents sought to narrow the search within the command of
Chimel,
we have no occasion to determine whether a good faith effort by law enforcement officials to limit the scope and intensity of a search incident to a lawful arrest would have had a bearing on the reasonableness of that search under
Chimel. Cf.
*81
United States v. Hsu,
*82 III.
Having concluded that the warrantless search of Mrs. Walters’s apartment violated the Fourth Amendment, we hold that the evidence seized during the course of that search should have been suppressed at trial. Mapp urges that the admission into evidence of the two kilograms of heroin tainted his conviction on all three counts of the indictment in which he was named. We disagree. Although we are compelled to reverse his conviction for possession of heroin (Count 4), and his conviction for conspiracy, which charged possession of the two kilograms of heroin as an overt act (Count 1), we conclude that with respect to the conviction for sale of heroin on May 25 (Count 2), introduction of the heroin seized from Mrs. Walters’s apartment on June 21 was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. Chapman v. California,
Notes
. The Fourth Amendment provides:
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, ancl particularly describing the place to be searched and the persons or things to be seized.
. Mapp was not named in Count 3, which charged Alan Simmons and Robert Davis with the sale of approximately 3.41 grams *69 of heroin. Count 5, which charged Mapp, Walters and Clark with possession of cocaine was dismissed before trial on the government’s motion.
. Alan Simmons pleaded guilty and was sentenced to four years imprisonment to be followed by three years special parole. Robert Davis, named in Counts 1 and 3, fled the jurisdiction and has not been brought to trial. The case against Robert Clark was severed and will not be prosecuted, according to the government. The conspiracy charge (Count 1) against Linda Walters was dismissed at the close of the government’s case, and the jury failed to reach a verdict in her case on the possession count (Count 4). She was retried on October 30, 1972, before the Court, and convicted. She was sentenced to a term of probation.
. Mapp’s residence vas 3406 Ely Avenue in the Bronx.
. As previously indicated, Mapp was also known as Sonny Woods.
. After the Court denied the defendant’s motion to suppress, Mapp moved for severance of the “sale” count. The motion was denied.
. Rule 41(e), F.R.Cr.P., provides in pertinent part:
(e) Motion for Return of Property and to Suppress Evidence. A person aggrieved by an unlawful search and seizure may move the district court for the district in which the property was seized for the return of the property and to suppress for the use as evidence anything so obtained on the ground that (1) the property was illegally seized without warrant, or (2) the warrant is insufficient on its face, or (3) the property seized is not that described in the warrant, or (4) there was not probable cause for believing the existence of the grounds on which the warrant was issued, or (5) the warrant was illegally executed. . .
. The thrust of Mr. Justice Fortas’s separate opinion, 394 U.S. at pages 206-209, 89 S.Ct. at pages 981-986, is that
Jones
“requires that we include within the category of those who may object to the introduction of illegal evidence ‘one against whom the search was directed.’ Such a person is surely ‘the victim of an invasion of privacy’ and a ‘person aggrieved,’ even though it is not his property that was searched or seized.”
.
Combs
raised the question whether the petitioner had standing under Mancusi v. DeForte,
The Court in Mancusi relied upon Jones v. United States [362 U.S. 257 ,80 S.Ct. 725 ,4 L.Ed.2d 697 supra], as having done away with “the requirement that to establish standing one must show legal possession or ownership of the searched premises.”392 U.S., at 369 [88 S.Ct., at 2124 ], In Jones, the Court held that the petitioner then before it had standing and enunciated two rules as alternative grounds for its decision. First, the Jones Court ruled that the “possession on the basis of which [an accused] is to be . . . convicted suffices to give him standing under any fair and rational conception of the requirements of Rule 41(e),” Fed. Rule Crim.Proc.; second, the Court ruled that “anyone legitimately on the premises where a search occurs” has standing to challenge the legality of that search.362 U.S., at 264, 267 [80 S.Ct., *73 at 734]. The Government has urged that we take the opportunity, said to be presented by the instant ease, to re-examine the first alternative holding of Jones. Even assuming we were disposed to do so, the Court of Appeals did not, in the opinion it filed in this ease, deal with the question whether the nature of the charge against petitioner brought his case within the coverage of the first aspect of the Jones holding, and we decline to reach or consider issues not yet passed on by that court.
. Patrolman Crowe had, prior to June 21, obtained a search warrant for apartment H, at 1925 Monterrey Avenue, believing it to be the suspect apartment. Subsequent investigation disclosed that there was no such apartment.
. 21 U.S.C. § 879, enacted in 1970, authorizes forcible official entry into a dwelling, during the day or night, to search for narcotics, but only if the entry is pursuant to a warrant. Since no such warrant was secured in this case, the statute is inapplicable.
. The case was argued before the Supreme Court on October 10, 1972. One of the issues considered was whether the government must substantiate verbal consent to search an automobile by a demonstration that the consent was given with knowledge that it could be withheld. 41 U.S. L.W. 3237 (1972).
. In
Gorman, supra,
the Court held that consent was voluntarily given when the accused, who had been arrested, agreed to a search after being asked whether he would object. The Court noted, however, that the accused had twice been warned that he need not answer any questions.
See also,
United States v. Hsu, 424 E.2d 1286 (2 Cir. 1970) cert. denied,
. United States v. Gaines,
The facts in Gaines diverge in critical aspects from those in the instant case. In Gaines, there had been no announcement of arrest prior to the request for identification. Gaines may have believed, therefore, that his arrest and a full-scale search might have been forestalled by directing the officers to his jacket. The officers identified themselves to Gaines and there was not the slightest suggestion that any one of them held a gun in hand at the time the request for consent was made. These distinctions indicate compelling differences in the cases.
. We have not been cited to any cases in this Circuit, nor has our own research disclosed any, that run counter to our decision. Since
Chimel
was not made retroactive,
see
Williams v. United States,
Nor does United States v. Titus,
The apartment was dark; Titus was found, nude and in a crouched position, with a sawed off shotgun leveled at the agents. On command he lowered the gun, which the agents seized. One of the agents backed him against a wall and directed another to bring clothing. In the course of doing this the latter agent noticed and seized two army fatigue jackets of the type that had been described ns having been worn by the robbers. Agent AVelch, making his way back into the kitchen through which he had entered and now lighted, found on the floor a considerable quantity of money, including some with straps bearing the name of the bank and some with straps bearing the name of one of the victimized tellers. This was seized.
It was conceded that the agents had a right to seize the shotgun from Titus's person. The Court justified the seizure of the fatigue jackets on the ground that the agents were under a duty to find clothing for Titus rather than bring him nude to the stationhouse. When one agent went to get Titus’s clothing, he happened upon the jackets. That fact pattern clearly complied with the directive announced by the plurality opinion in Coolidge v. New Hampshire,
supra,
that the discovery of evidence in plain view must be “inadvertent.”
Id.
Finally, both United States v. Pino,
