MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
Defendant Srouch Khut, charged with drug trafficking and firearms offenses, moves to suppress evidence seized on August 21, 2005 from a residence at 135 Cross Street in Lowell, Massachusetts. The government witnesses were Detective William J. Samaras, Jr. and Sergeant
I. FINDINGS OF FACT
A. The Backdrop
In February of 2005, a confidential source provided information to the Lowell Police Department that Sophoan Oung (“Hershey”) and his brother, Sophanara Oung (“Bee”), were trafficking in cocaine in the Lowell area. Working with local police, the Drug Enforcement Agency (“DEA”) set up surveillance of the Oungs, and the federal court authorized wiretaps on both their cell phones. The defendant, Srouch Khut, was a customer.
On the night of August 20, police learned over the wire that Bee had discovered undercover officers tailing his car after a drug buy. The Oung brothers, who now suspected they were the target of an investigation, discussed fleeing and hiding or destroying evidence. Hearing this over the wire, the police decided to truncate the investigation and intervene. The police entered Hershey’s girlfriend’s house without a warrant. In quick succession, Hershey and Bee were arrested and their apartment was entered and searched, again without a warrant. Later, after search warrants had been obtained, police discovered firearms, ammunition, and substantial quantities of cocaine and cocaine base. Detective Samaras participated in the takedown of the Oungs. 1
B. 134 Cross Street
Earlier on August 20, before the events of the evening began to unfold, a confidential source (“CS”) made plans with defendant Khut to purchase two ounces of eo-caine the next day. The CS had made six previous controlled buys from the defendant. During one of these buys, the CS told police that Khut carried a gun and had mentioned that he (Khut) wasn’t afraid to shoot someone. The police were aware that the defendant had served time for armed home invasion and was heavily involved in local gang activity.
Around noon on August 21, a Sunday, Detective Samaras had the CS attempt to contact Khut on his cell phone. Khut did not answer and, unlike the previous buys, Khut did not return the calls within the hour. Although Khut had not set a time for the sale, previous transactions had taken place in the early afternoon. Samaras became worried that Khut had learned of the arrests of his cohorts and would attempt to flee. Around 1 p.m., Samaras made the decision to go to 135 Cross Street, Unit 4 to arrest Khut. The police did not know if Khut was in the apartment at the time, but he frequently stayed there, and five previous controlled buys had taken place in the apartment. The police made no effort to get an arrest warrant.
Around 2 p.m., the police arrived at 135 Cross Street. They wore raid vests and had their badges prominently displayed. Another resident let the team in through the apartment building’s front door and into the common hallway. The mail/call boxes listed a person by the name of Khut as residing in Unit 6.
The team immediately went to Unit 4 on the second floor of the building. Lieutenant Richardson knocked and announced “Police” several times, but no one answered. DEA Special Agent Christian Brackett then went upstairs to Unit 6,
About a minute had passed from when the team first knocked and announced “Police” at Unit 4. Concerned that the inhabitants would destroy drugs, arm themselves, or flee, the team rammed the door down, entered with guns drawn, and announced their presence. They came upon Khut and his girlfriend, Sambath Chan, asleep and undressed in the bedroom. Eleven officers were in the apartment.
The police saw in plain view on the bedroom nightstand a small quantity of cocaine. The officers confiscated the drugs, and performed a brief protective sweep. Then, Detective Samaras left to obtain a search warrant for the premises. When he returned with a warrant 2-3 hours later, the officers searched the apartment. Ten small bags of crack cocaine were found in a cigarette box in the bedroom.
II. DISCUSSION
A. Warrantless Entry and Exigent Circumstances
“[T]he Constitution normally requires the police to obtain an arrest warrant before entering a person’s home to make an arrest.”
United States v. Beltran,
“Nevertheless, a warrantless entry into a person’s dwelling may be permitted if ‘exigent circumstances’ arise.”
Samboy,
(1) ‘hot pursuit’ of a fleeing felon; (2) threatened destruction of evidence inside a residence before a warrant can be obtained; (3) a risk that the suspect may escape from the residence undetected; or (4) a threat, posed by a suspect, to the lives or safety of the public, the police officers, or to an occupant.
Tibolt,
Further, “[p]roof of exigent circumstances ‘should be supported by particularized, case-specific facts, not simply generalized suppositions about the behav
B. Manufactured Exigency
Moreover, “[c]ircumstances deliberately created by the police themselves cannot justify a warrantless search.”
United States v. Curzi,
The First Circuit has made clear that “no exigent circumstances exist when ‘the police fully expect that they may have to enter a home to make an arrest in the near future and ... they have more than enough time and knowledge to secure a warrant.’ ”
Samboy,
Courts must “distinguish between cases where exigent circumstances arise naturally during a delay in obtaining a warrant and those where officers have deliberately created the exigent circumstances.”
United States v. Maldonado,
[i]n determining whether the exigent circumstances were manufactured by the agents, we must consider not only the motivation of the police in creating the exigency but also the reasonableness and propriety of the investigative tactics that generated the exigency. We look to whether (1) there was sufficient time to secure a warrant; and (2) whether the exigency was created by unreasonable law enforcement tactics.
Id.; see also Samboy,
C. 135 Cross Street
Here, the police had a probable cause before August 20 to arrest Khut because several controlled buys had taken place. However, “[tjhere is no legal rule requiring the police to seek a warrant as soon as probable cause likely exists to seek a war
The government argues that it reasonably feared that Khut’s failure to return the OS’s phone calls indicated that he had learned of his cohorts’ arrests the night before. There is no evidence from the wiretap that Khut knew about the arrest, and a one-hour delay between the cell phone calls and the entry, while worrisome, was not sufficient to create an exigency sufficient to justify a warrantless incursion into Khut’s home. The evidence was that prior transactions had occurred in the early afternoon and it was still only 1:00 p.m.
See United States v. Torres,
Next, the government argues that once the police announced their presence and learned that Khut was inside Unit 4, they reasonably feared that the defendant would destroy evidence. However, investigating officers may not create exigent circumstances by choosing not to get a warrant, making their presence known by knocking-and-announcing, and then claiming that a warrantless search is necessary to avoid destruction of evidence.
See United States v. Chambers,
True, courts have upheld the practice of “knock and talk” — a tactic in which an officer knocks on a suspect’s door, “identifies himself[,] asks to talk to the home occupant and then eventually requests permission to search the residence” — as a legitimate means to obtain a suspect’s
consent
to search.
United States v. Zertuche-Tobias,
The government emphasizes that the police did not know if Khut was in the apartment prior to approaching the neighbor and, on this view, that exigent circumstances did not arise until after their suspicion of his presence inside the apartment was confirmed. However, the police had more than enough probable cause to obtain a search warrant for the apartment because five controlled buys had taken place at that location.
See United States v. Materas,
The government alternatively argues that clerk-magistrates at the Lowell District Court routinely refuse to issue arrest warrants in drug cases and instruct police to make probable cause drug arrests. See Mass. Gen. Laws c. 94C, § 41 (“Section 41”). 5 The short answer is that the police twice within 24 hours received a search warrant from the Lowell Court within 2 to 3 hours of request. I do not credit this testimony that the clerk would decline a request for an arrest warrant. In any event, a clerks’ practice does not trump the constitutional necessity of procuring a warrant where an officer anticipates an arrest in a dwelling.
Accordingly, the government has failed to meet its burden of demonstrating a non-manufactured exigency capable of overriding the Fourth Amendment’s warrant requirement. The defendant’s motion to suppress evidence seized at 135 Cross Street is therefore ALLOWED.
ORDER
Defendant’s motion to suppress evidence (Docket No. 52) is ALLOWED.
Notes
. This Court ruled on Hershey and Bee's motion to suppress evidence seized during these searches.
See United States v. Oung,
. The basis for the neighbor’s belief that Khut was inside the apartment is unknown.
. The parties agree that the government had probable cause to arrest Khut based on the previous controlled buys.
. See Hearing Tr. 26:6-7 (Feb. 16.2007) ("We believed he — we knew he lived there, but I believe it was in his girlfriend's name.”)(statement of Det. Samaras).
. Section 41(b) provides that a "police officer shall have the authority to arrest without a warrant ... any person who he has probable cause to believe has committed or is committing” listed felonies, including distribution of cocaine.
