Good appeals his conviction on two counts for the unlawful possession of a firearm by a felon in violation of 18 U.S.C. App. § 1202(a)(1). He argues that the entry and search of his home and truck without a warrant were illegal and that critical evidence seized should have been suppressed. We have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291, and we affirm.
I
On August 17,1984, while at the home of Susan Wallace, John Snyder, Wallace, Good, and Sharon Bullock, with whom Good lived, became involved in a drunken altercation as a result of Snyder’s improper sexual advances towards Bullock. After Good retrieved a revolver from his truck, he and Snyder engaged in a fight during which Good pistol-whipped Snyder, and in which both Snyder and Bullock were stabbed. Good and Bullock then left Wallace’s home, and Wallace contacted a neighbor who called the police.
When the police arrived, they found that Snyder had been stabbed and saw two pools of blood on the floor. Both Snyder and Wallace were intoxicated, but made it clear that Good’s female companion also had been stabbed, that not all of the blood on the floor was Snyder’s, and that Bullock had left with Good. Snyder said that he believed Bullock was in danger. They also gave the police a description of Good and his truck.
Approximately four hours later, shortly before 9:00 a.m., an officer saw a truck matching Snyder’s description parked in the driveway of Good’s house. The officers entered Good’s house without a warrant, arrested Good, and seized a rifle as Good was reaching for it. After the arrest, an officer looked into the truck and saw a revolver partially protruding from under the seal. The officer entered the truck and seized the revolver. The rifle and revolver were the weapons involved in Good’s convictions.
II
Good first argues that he was unlawfully arrested and the rifle improperly seized because the officers lacked exigent circumstances when they entered his home without a warrant. We review the district court’s finding of exigent circumstances de novo.
United States v. McConney,
Good relies on the asserted absence of credible facts to support a finding of exigency. The record, however, clearly establishes that the officers reasonably thought that a woman in Good’s company had been stabbed and had lost blood, but were unaware of the extent of her injuries. The fact that Snyder and Wallace were intoxicated when they talked with the police is probative only of their credibility and the reliability of their statements. In this instance, the district court did not err in concluding that the police could rely upon them.
Good’s argument based upon the absence of evidence regarding his propensity for violence, the silence at his home, and the officers’ failure to ascertain that the female victim lived with Good ignores the salient fact giving rise to exigency — the undisputed existence of a stabbing victim who left with him from Wallace’s home. We have defined exigent circumstances as circumstances involving “a substantial risk of harm to the persons involved,”
United States v. Robertson,
Exigent circumstances alone, however, are insufficient as the government must also show that a warrant could not have been obtained in time.
United States v. Manfredi,
Obtaining a telephonic warrant is not a simple procedure; “[ajmong other things, a ‘duplicate original warrant’ must be prepared in writing and read to the magistrate verbatim.” Id. at 523. The only step that is saved is the trip to the magistrate’s office. Since a warrant could not have been prepared until Good’s house was identified, we conclude that under the circumstances, the government has satisfied its burden of showing that the delay associated with obtaining a telephonic warrant would have unduly increased the risk to the stabbing victim that the officers reasonably believed to be in Good’s home and in need of assistance. Cf. id. (one and one-half hour delay did not require a telephonic warrant).
III
Subsequent to the arrest, an officer looked into the truck and saw the revolver in plain view. Good does not contest that the gun was plainly visible or that its incriminating nature was apparent as a result of the officers’ knowledge that Snyder had been pistol-whipped. Moreover, we already have concluded that the officers were lawfully on Good’s property, and thus lawfully in a position to look into the truck parked in the driveway.
Good relies on
Coolidge v. New Hampshire,
We conclude that the limited intrusion to seize the revolver in this case did not require suppression of the revolver. The Supreme Court has held that evidence may be seized from a vehicle without a warrant if the initial view is made by an officer lawfully present, the discovery was “inadvertent,” and the evidentiary character of the object was “immediately apparent.”
Texas v. Brown,
AFFIRMED.
