*1207 MEMORANDUM
This Memorandum addresses the government’s motion to reconsider the Court’s previous ruling in this case, which granted defendant McCool’s motion to suppress a set of car keys seized from his person after his arrest. See Memorandum and Order of November 16, 1981. Upon thorough reconsideration of the troubling fourth amendment issues raised by this case, the Court is now of the opinion that defendant’s arrest did not violate the fourth amendment. Accordingly, the government’s motion to reconsider shall be granted, and defendant’s original motion to suppress the car keys is consequently denied.
In its November 16 Memorandum, the Court found that defendant’s arrest was supported by probable cause, a finding supported only by reference to the government’s brief. Given the change of result effected by today’s ruling, however, the Court now deems it appropriate to set forth more explicitly the basis for its finding of probable cause. On September 8, 1981, Agent William Tucker of the DEA, acting in an undercover capacity, met with James McCloud (a co-defendant in this case) at McCloud’s residence. Agent Tucker had previously purchased qualudes from McCloud and had arranged during the Labor Day weekend to purchase additional quantities from him. After waiting for a time at McCloud’s house, Agent Tucker and McCloud separately drove to the Nob Hill Villa Apartments. McCloud had told Tucker that they were driving to these apartments because that’s where the qualude sale would be made. Upon arriving at the Nob Hill Villa, McCloud instructed Agent Tucker where to park, and McCloud parked to the left of Agent Tucker. Shortly after McCloud and Tucker arrived in the parking lot of Nob Hill Villa, Agent Tucker observed defendant McCool come out of the doorway that leads to Building E of the apartments and walk over to McCloud’s car. At that time McCool’s name was unknown to the agent.
McCool stayed at McCloud’s car for approximately two minutes, and then he walked back to Building E. (The testimony was unclear as to whether McCool actually got into McCloud’s car.) There was a common entrance to Building E, and therefore Agent Tucker could not tell which apartment McCool entered. McCloud, now with a large bulge under his t-shirt, came over and got in Agent Tucker’s car. The bulge, as it turned out, consisted of a package of approximately 1,000 qualudes. After performing a field test on one of the tablets, Agent Tucker placed McCloud under arrest.
After his arrest, McCloud told Agent Tucker that his source’s name was McCool. McCloud did not know the number of McCool’s apartment, however. DEA Agents Tucker and Owensby then approached Building E in an effort to locate McCool’s apartment. Agent Tucker asked someone standing on a balcony if he knew McCool, but he did not. In the meantime, Tennessee Bureau of Identification Agent Leigh Grinalds, who had observed the drug transaction from another surveillance point, informed Agent Tucker that McCool’s package had come out of a green car. Agent Tucker then asked this unidentified third party if he knew who drove the green car, and he was told that the person driving the green car lived in Apartment E-14, which was the apartment directly below the balcony where the third party was located.
Based upon these facts alone, the Court finds that the agents had probable cause to arrest the occupant of Apartment E-14, who turned out to be defendant McCool. At that point, Agent Tucker had sufficient information to justify a belief that the occupant of Apartment E-14 had committed a crime.
Cf. Brinegar v. United States,
Having found that McCool’s arrest was supported by probable cause, the Court must now determine whether McCool’s arrest was illegal because it violated the warrant requirement of
Payton
v. New
York,
The short answer to this inquiry is that Payton and its predecessors in this circuit are inapplicable if arresting officers do not enter a dwelling to make the arrest at issue. See
United States v. Botero,
Under this analysis, the
Payton
rule prohibiting warrantless and nonconsensual entries into a suspect’s home to make routine felony arrests is inapplicable to “doorway arrests” even though, as a technical matter, the arrest occurs inside the home. This point is important because McCool’s arrest occurred while he still stood within his home, even though he was quickly removed from it.
See United States v. Johnson,
Even though the
Payton
rule is inapplicable to this case because the arrest was accomplished without an entry, the Court cautions that a different result might follow if the agents had had an opportunity to obtain a warrant for McCool’s arrest before the events recounted above.
Payton
expressly limited itself to cases involving “routine arrests in which there was ample time to obtain a warrant,”
If the facts had shown that Agent Tucker could have obtained a warrant for MeCool’s arrest before this episode, the Court would be inclined to hold the arrest illegal under
Payton,
despite the absence of an entry. To uphold warrantless arrests at a person’s home whenever law enforcement officers successfully obtain his presence at a door too readily allows subversion of the
Payton
principle.
See United States v. Johnson, supra,
Because defendant’s warrantless arrest in the doorway of his apartment was the unforeseen result of a field investigation, the Court holds that his arrest was not illegal under
Payton v. New York.
Consequently, the search incident to arrest that led to the retrieval of the keys at issue was constitutional.
See United States v. Robinson,
Notes
.
Botero
was decided after a
pre-Payton
Ninth Circuit decision that followed this circuit’s decision in
United States v. Shye, supra,
which prohibited warrantless entries of a dwelling to .make arrests.
See United States v. Prescott,
. Even if it were material, this Court would still be persuaded by Botero, because Agent Tucker knocked and announced before defendant McCool came to the door.
