Miltоn Watson appeals his conviction of illegal possession of firearms. Concluding that the conviction is based on evidence obtained in possible violation of the Fourth Amendment, we vacate and remand for further proceedings to determine whether such a violation occurred.
I.
Undercover officers de la Rosa and Lott observed police informant Lee Addison paying a sum of money to Watson in exchange for illegal narcоtics. Addison had agreed to attempt to purchase drugs while under the officers’ surveillance.
After witnessing the transaction, the officers radioed their superior, Sergeant Williams, who ordered the warrantless arrest of Addison and Watsоn. Officer Morse testified that he arrested Watson on the porch of his house, outside the front door, and that Watson was “coming toward the front door of the house from the inside of the house” at the time of arrest. Watson submitted an affidavit confirming his arrest on the front porch.
Officer Coker arrested Addison on the porch. Officers also detained Roderick Mayfield, Watson’s friend, and Lincoln Streber, his uncle, both of whom were in the vicinity of the house.
Morse then madе a protective sweep of the house to look for dangerous persons. Morse testified that he lacked specific reason to believe other individuals were in the house but that the possibility always exists. During the sweeр, Morse found boxes of Swisher cigars, commonly used to make marihuana cigars, and gallon jugs of codeine syrup, an illegal narcotic.
After his arrest, Watson informed Williams that he lived in the house. Williams claims that he requested Watson’s permission to “go into the bedroom and get the dope out.” Williams told Watson that the officers had seen narcotics and narcotics paraphernalia in the house. At the suppression hearing, Williams and the other officеrs testified that Watson had consented to the search. Streber and Mayfield testified that they did not hear Williams ask for consent, despite their close proximity to Watson. The search uncovered crack cocaine, marihuana, and four illegal weapons.
A two-count indictment charged Watson with possession of firearms in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1) and using those firearms in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 924(c). The district court denied Watson’s motion to suppress the evidence found in the protective sweep and search of his house, finding that (1) Watson was inside the house when the officers arrived, but they did not arrest him until he went outside, (2) the lawful arrest justified a subsequent protective sweep, (3) the sweep revealеd narcotics in plain view and led the officers to request permission to search the house *602 further, and (4) Watson consented to the second search.
Watson pleaded guilty to illegal possession of firearms, and the government agreed to dismiss the other charge. Watson reservеd the right to appeal the denial of his motion to suppress. He now challenges the constitutionality of his arrest, of the protective sweep, and of the more extensive later search.
II.
The legality of the arrest turns in рart on the question whether Watson was arrested inside his house (as he claims) or outside (as claimed by the government). Warrantless seizures of a person inside his home are “presumptively unreasonable.”
Payton v. New York,
We must defer to the district court’s factual finding that Watson was arrested outside his house, on the porch,
1
“unless [it is] clearly erroneous or influenced by an incorrect view of law.”
United States v. Wilson,
Watson contends that he did not exit the house voluntarily and that he went onto the pоrch in response to an order by the arresting officers. He claims that the order in itself constituted a seizure. The government, supported by the testimony of the arresting officers, claims that Watson voluntarily exited the house immediately before the arrest. Because Watson fails to offer independent corroboration for his account, the district court’s decision to disbelieve it and accept that of the officers is not clearly erroneous and therefore must stand.
Assuming, as we must, that Watson was arrested outside the house on his porch,
2
the legality of the arrest must be upheld if the officers had probable cause to believe that he “had committed or was committing an offense.”
Wadley,
The facts are almost identical to those of
United States v. Antone,
III.
Regarding the legality of the protective sweep of Watson’s house, “as an incident to ... arrest ... officers [may], as a precautionary measure and without probable cause or reаsonable suspicion, look in closets and other spaces immediately adjoining the place of arrest from which an attack could be immediately launched.”
Maryland v. Buie,
The mere рresence of illegal drugs and weapons does not justify a protective sweep.
United States v. Munoz-Guerra,
The police knew thаt Watson and Addison likely had entered the house with drugs, and thus there was a possibility that drugs would be destroyed if not seized quickly. Moreover, the officers believed that there was a possibility that Watson might have additional accomplices who were still inside the house and could pose a threat to the officers’ safety. Although the factual basis for these concerns is disputable, they are reasonable enough that we cannot say that the district court was clearly erroneous in upholding the validity of the sweep.
IV.
In response to Watson’s challenge to the full-scale search of his house that the officers undertook after discovering drugs during the protective sweep, the govеrnment argues that it was justified because Watson voluntarily consented to it. Watson contends that he did not consent and, in the alternative, claims that any consent was involuntary.
The government bears the burden of proving the existence of voluntary consent to a search; proof must be by a preponderance of evidence.
United States v. Yeagin,
The district court did not clearly err in finding, by a preponderance of evidence, that Watson consented, but the court did not consider voluntariness. Therefore, we cannot accept the finding that there was a sufficient degree of consent to justify the search.
With respect to the mere existence of consent, the court properly relied on the testimony of the three officers present, all of whom stated that they saw Watson give consent. Although Watson’s witnesses disputed the officers’ accounts, the court’s decision to accept the officers’ testimony in preference to that of the defense witnesses was not clearly erroneous.
In this circuit, district courts must
focus on six factors in determining whether consent to a search was voluntary:
(1) the voluntariness of the defendant’s custodial stаtus; (2) the presence of coercive police procedures; (3) the extent and level of the defendant’s cooperation with the police; (4) the defendant’s awareness of his right to refuse consent; (5) the defendant’s education and intelligence; and (6) the defendant’s belief that no incriminating evidence will be found.
Ponce,
On remand, the district court will have to consider the еvidence pertaining to each of the six factors and weigh them against each other. It should try to determine Watson’s age and education level, which do not currently appear in the record. 5
In summary, because Watson’s conviction for illegal firearms possession was based solely on evidence discovered during the full-scale search of his house, 6 we VACATE the conviction and REMAND for a determination of the question of voluntariness.
Notes
. The district court found that "[a]t the time the officers moved in to arrest Defendant, he was inside the house. The officers brought Defendant outside to arrest him.” This is not inconsistent with the government’s claim that Watson was taken outside voluntarily or with the district court’s ultimate conclusion that the arrest was constitutional,
. An arrest on a porch is not considered "inside” the house for purposes of determining its constitutionality under the Fourth Amendment.
Kirkpatrick v. Butler,
.
Cf. Stansel v. United States,
.
See also United States
v.
Holloway,
. This court has not opined on how the factors are to be weighed if they point in conflicting directions. One obvious way is to assume that, barring unusual circumstances, the side supported by a majority of the factors should prevail.
Cf. United States v. Casas,
No. EP-99-CR-1070-DB,
.Charges based on possession of the illegal drugs found during the protective sweep were dropped as one of the conditions of Watson’s plea agreement.
