In this proceeding the defendant appeals his two count conviction for possession of both cocaine and marijuana with intent to distribute. 21 U.S.C.A. § 841(a)(1). His sole contention: the trial court erred in denying his motion to suppress evidence seized after a warrantless entry into his home. Finding the intrusion lawful under the exigent circumstances exception to the warrant requirement, and that defendant failed to prove sufficiently a violation of the knock and announce requirements' of § 3109 to obtain suppression of the evidence, we affirm.
In May 1975, Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) officials arrested Ronald Gunn in Georgia after Gunn sold them cocaine. Gunn named defendant’s wife, Susan Gardner, as his source. In hope of lenient treatment, Gunn agreed to cooperate with DEA by working as an informer.
After a monitored phone call to the Gardner household, Gunn flew to the Fort Lauderdale airport and met defendant in a local bar. The two men then traveled to defendant’s home. DEA agents, who had been following Gunn, tailed the pair as they left the bar, but lost them in traffic. Other agents, however, had staked out defendant’s home because they thought a kilogram of cocaine might be hidden there. As a result, they were on the scene when defendant and the informer arrived. After 15-20 minutes, the two emerged from the home. The informer pulled out his shirttail and wiped his glasses, a prearranged signal that cocaine was in the house. Federal agents, in at least five cars, promptly moved in with their guns drawn and arrested both defendant and Gunn.
Gunn told the agents a female was in the house. The agents took the defendant’s car keys, knocked on the door, unlocked it, and entered. Inside they found the defendant’s wife. The evidence concerning the conduct of the officers upon gaining access to the house conflicts. Both parties agree, however, that the defendant, upon being told a warrant could be obtained to allow a thorough search, correctly informed the agents that cocaine could be found in a kitchen cabinet.
The defendant claims the entry violated his Fourth Amendment rights so that the fruits should be excluded from evidence. He argues that the Government has not met its burden of showing probable cause and “exigent circumstances” to justify the entry into his house without a warrant.
See Coolidge v. New Hampshire,
Defendants argue that probable cause for a search warrant existed so far in advance of the search that the agents’ failure to obtain a warrant was inexcusable.
McDonald v. United States,
Defendant contends there was insufficient proof of imminent destruction of contraband to satisfy the exigent circumstances exception to the warrant requirement. The district court’s finding of adequate justification for entry is not clearly erroneous. Gunn’s signal provided ample probable cause for arrest. When Gunn told the agents someone was in the house, an immediate entry became necessary to prevent disposal of the cocaine, a powder which can easily be flushed down a toilet. The agents could logically have suspected that anyone inside the house would be well aware of the five police cars ringing the premises and the arrest of defendant and Gunn. The danger that someone would dispose of the illicit drugs was especially great in this case because the agents knew the person in the house might be Susan Gardner, the defendant’s wife and partner in the drug trade. Accordingly, the agents justifiably acted “ ‘now or never’ to preserve the evidence of the crime.”
Roaden v. Kentucky,
Defendant argues that only if the agents knew that his wife was in the house could they rely on the imminent danger of contraband destruction as an exigent circumstance to justify a warrantless entry. Such sure knowledge that the person in the house was Susan Gardner was not a necessary prerequisite to entry. The agents could rely on the reasonable forecast that anyone in the house at the time defendant and Gunn were there might know cocaine was present and, seeing the major arrest activity in front of the house immediately upon their departure, might be expected to try to dispose of it.
The defendant’s reliance on
Vale v. Louisiana,
The defendant further contends that once the agents entered and secured the premises, thereby assuring that any con
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cealed evidence would not be destroyed, they were required to seek a search warrant for the premises before they could go back through the house and search for contraband.
United States v. Erwin,
The defendant also seeks to exclude the same evidence by asserting that the federal agents, by failing to announce their “authority and purpose” before they unlocked the door of defendant’s home, violated 18 U.S.C.A. § 3109. That statute provides: “[t]he officer may break open any outer or inner door or window of a house, or any part of a house, or anything therein, to execute a search warrant, if, after notice of his authority and purpose, he is refused admittance . . . .” The statute applies whether or not the officers acted pursuant to a warrant.
Sabbath v. United States,
We need not decide the effect of a violation on defendant’s case. The defendant’s being outside with the officers rather than in the building at the time of entry is not relevant to this decision. The record does not show a § 3109 violation. DEA Agent James C. Brown, the arresting officer, when asked what the agent who had unlocked the door had said, replied “I don’t know that he said anything at all.” Neither Agent Brown, nor the defendant, nor the defendant’s neighbor, all of whom were present at the scene, testified that the agent failed to give the required announcement. Positive testimony showed that he knocked.
In asserting a § 3109 claim, the burden of establishing a prima facie case rests on the defendant.
United States v. Murrie,
AFFIRMED.
