Appellant, Raymond Eugene Johnson, was convicted in a jury trial of aiding and abetting the obstruction of correspondence, a violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1703 and 18 U.S.C. § 2. Johnson appeals on the ground that statements made by him on the day of his arrest should have been suppressed for the reason that the arrest was illegal and the statements were products of the illegal arrest and not voluntarily made, and on the further ground that the judge committed error in instructing the jury concerning the voluntariness of appellant’s confession. We reverse.
FACTS
On March 30, 1977, Lena Kearney received by mistake in the mail a letter addressed to Elihu Peterson, containing a United States Treasury check payable to Peterson, in the amount of $4,681.00. Kearney discussed the recеipt of this check with her sister-in-law, Wynona Powell, and decided to keep the check and attempt to cash it. Powell then phoned a friend, Joe Dodd, to ask him for assistance in cashing the check. On the following day, Dodd arrived at the Kearney residence with Eugene McCardell and Raymond Johnson, the appellant. The three men seated themselves around а coffee table in Kearney’s living room and studied the check. Johnson picked up the check and made a telephone call. During this call he discussed the check and the difficulty of cashing the check because of the age of the payee. Johnson then returned after completing the call and stated that he believed he had someone who could assist them in cashing the check. Dodd, Johnson and McCardell then left the Kearney residence and took the check with them.
Special Agent Richard Hemenway of the United States Secret Service commenced investigating this matter. He interrogated Lena Kearney, who told them that appellant Johnson was one of three men who came to her house for the check and partici *755 pated in a general discussion as to how to cash the check. She further stated that Johnson made a telephone call in an attempt to find someone to forge the check. Kearney also identified Johnson from a photo spread as the person who had come to her house. Wynona Powell gave Agent Hemenway appellant Johnson’s telephone number, which she stated had been given to her by Dodd as the number at which Dodd could be contacted. Upon checking with the Los Angeles Police Department, Agent Hemenway discovered that Johnson was named in the criminal history files as an associate of Dodd in Dodd’s criminal history. Special Agent Hemenway did obtain а warrant for the arrest of Dodd, based on the above and other information obtained through investigation. A warrant for the arrest of Johnson was not obtained.
Special Agent Hemenway and Special Agent William Pickering went to the Johnson house on May 5, 1977, at approximately 6:00 P.M. The agents watched the house for a short period and Agent Pickering saw Johnson’s vehiclе, with two persons inside, pull up to the driveway of Johnson’s house. The two agents then approached the doorway, drew their weapons, pointed them downward and knocked, at first identifying themselves by fictitious names. When Johnson opened the door, Hemenway introduced himself and Pickering as special agents and asked to talk with Johnson. Johnson told the agents to cоme in. Pickering then stood in the living room with Johnson, while Hemenway looked into the other rooms for other people who might be in the house and present a possible danger to the agents. A woman was discovered during the search and was asked to go into the living room. After Hemenway finished looking into the rooms, which took between 15-30 seconds, he told Pickering that everything wаs secure. Pickering and Hemenway then returned their weapons to their holsters.
Hemenway then asked Johnson if he would step into the bedroom to talk with him, and Johnson agreed. Before entering the bedroom, Hemenway informed Johnson of his constitutional rights. Johnson responded that he wished to cooperate and then told Hemenway of his involvement in taking the Treasury check. Johnson was then told that he was under arrest. The agents and Johnson left the residence and went to the police station. At the station, Johnson was again advised of his constitutional rights and stated that he understood them. He told Pickering of his involvement with the check while Pickering wrote out the statement. Johnson read the statement, made changes and initialed them. He was placed under oath by Pickering and signed the statement.
Legality of the Arrest
The two special agents testified that they had not intended to effect an arrest at the time they initially entered the residence of appellant Johnson. It was their belief that an arrest had not occurred until after the interview with Johnson. However, whether an arrest has occurred depends upon an objеctive, not subjective, evaluation of what a person innocent of a crime would have thought of the situation, given all of the factors involved. When an arrest has occurred depends in each case upon an evaluation of all the surrounding circumstances. Primary among these is a determination of whether or not the defendant was free to choоse between terminating or continuing the encounter with the law enforcement officers.
See Sibron v. New York,
From a review of all of the circumstances surrounding the encounter between Johnson and the special agents, we find that appellant’s arrest occurred as he stood within his home at the doorway of his home and was first confronted by the agents with their guns drawn. The agents then entered the home with their guns still drawn until the search of the home had been concluded. Johnson was held in the living room while the house was searched. One of the agents *756 remained with Johnson at all times. It is extremely doubtful that Johnson would have believed that he was free to leave at any time or to request the officers to leave after the initial encounter. A reasonablе person, under those circumstances, would have thought that he was under arrest.
We must determine whether, even assuming that probable cause existed, the arrest of Johnson in his doorway without first obtaining a warrant violated his Fourth Amendment rights. A warrantless arrest of an individual in a public place upon probable cause does not violate the Fourth Amendment, even though exigent circumstances may not exist.
United States v. Watson,
In
United States v. Santana,
Most recently, in
Payton v. New York,
The Court held the arrests in both cases to be illegal because of the wаrrantless nonconsensual entry into the homes of the appellants. The Court emphasized the significance of the boundaries of the dwelling:
But the critical point is that any differences in the intrusiveness of entries to search and entries to arrest are merely ones of degree rather than kind. The two intrusions share this fundamental characteristic: the breach of the entrance to an individual’s home. The Fourth Amendment protects the individual’s privacy in a variety of settings. In none is the zone of privacy more clearly defined than when bounded by the unambiguous physical dimensions of an individual’s home — a zone that finds its roots in clear and specific constitutional terms: “The right of the people to be secure in their . houses . . . shall not be violated.” That language unequivocally establishes the proposition that “[a]t the very core [of the Fourth Amendment] stands the right of a man to retreat into his own home and there be free from unreasonable Government intrusion.” Silverman v. United States,365 U.S. 505 , 511, [81 S.Ct. 679 , 682,5 L.Ed.2d 734 ]. In *757 terms that apply equally to seizures of property and to seizures of persons, the Fourth Amendment has drawn a firm line at the entrance to the house. Absent exigent circumstances, that threshold may not reasonably be crossed without a warrant.
This case can be distinguished from both
Santana
and
Botero.
In
Santana
the suspect was in full view in the doorway as the officers approached. In
Botero
there was no subterfuge in getting the suspect to open the door; furthermore, exigent circumstances existed. In contrast, Johnson opened the door of his dwelling after the agents misrepresented their identities; thus, Johnson’s initial exposure to the view and the physical control of the agents was not consensual on his part.
Cf. Payton,
This case, on the оther hand, differs from both of the situations addressed in
Payton.
The illegal search of Payton’s home and the illegal arrest of Riddick did not occur until the police had entered the suspect’s homes.
The Payton decision held that in the case of Obie Riddick the warrantless entry of the Riddick’s home by police officers to arrest Riddick was not justified when his three-year-old son opened the door and they could see him sitting in bed. We doubt the Supreme Court would have reached a different result had the police stood at the doorway and immediately placed Riddick under аrrest with weapons drawn.
This case rather closely parallels that of the Riddick case discussed in Pay-ton. Riddick did not voluntarily expose himself to warrantless arrest by the police as in a public place by allowing his three-year-old son to open the door of his home. Similarly, it cannot be said that Johnson voluntarily exposed himself to warrantless arrest by opening his door to agents who misrepresented their identities. In light of the strong language by the Court in Payton еmphasizing the special protection the Constitution affords to individuals within their homes, we find that the warrantless arrest of Johnson, while he stood within his home, after having opened the door in response to false identification by the agents, constituted a violation of his Fourth Amendment rights.
Fruits of the Arrest
The final question is whether the statements made by Johnson after his arrest were fruits of the unlawful arrest. Thе first statement was given by Johnson in his bedroom after he had been given his Miranda warnings but before he was formally told he was under arrest. In that statement, he admitted his involvement in taking the Treasury check. After having been placed formally under arrest he was taken to the police station where he was again given a Miranda warning before he signed a similar written statement under oath.
In
Brown v. Illinois,
Therefore, a determination that statements made after
Miranda
warnings
*758
were “voluntary” for purposes of the Fifth Amendment merely meets the “threshold requirement” for Fourth Amendment analysis.
Dunaway v. New York,
The Court in Dunaway elaborated on the Brown doctrine stating:
Brown articulated a test designed to vindicate the “distinct policies and interests of the Fоurth Amendment.” Following Wong Sun [v. U. S.,371 U.S. 471 ,83 S.Ct. 407 ,9 L.Ed.2d 441 ], the court eschewed any per se or “but for” rule, and identified the relevant inquiry as “whether Brown’s statements were obtained by exploitation of the illegality of his arrest.” Brown’s focus on “the causal connection between the illegality and the confession,” reflected the two policies behind the use of the exclusionary rule to effectuate the Fourth Amendment. When there is a close сausal connection between the illegal seizure and the confession, not only is exclusion of the evidence more likely to deter similar police misconduct in the future, but use of the evidence is more likely to compromise the integrity of the courts.
Dunaway,
The three factors identified in Brown in determining whether the statements were obtained by exploitation of an illegal arrest were:
(1) the tempоral proximity of the statements and the arrest;
(2) the presence of any intervening circumstances; and,
(3) the purpose and flagrancy of the official misconduct.
Brown,
The third factor, “the purpose and flagrancy of the official misconduct,” could arguably be viewed as a broad general factor utilized to assess whether the flagrancy of police misconduct justifies the exclusion of the evidence in light of the deterrence rationale of the exclusionary rule.
See Dunaway,
However, the Court appears instead, to apply the third factor along with the first two factors in determining the degree of causal remoteness. Justice Stevens in his concurring opinion in Dunaway stresses this point, stating:
The flagrancy of the official misconduct is relеvant, in my judgment, only insofar as it has a tendency to motivate the defendant. . . . [I]f the Fourth Amendment is violated, the admissibility question will turn on the causal relationship between the violation and the defendant’s subsequent confession.
Dunaway,
The statement of Johnson given to Agent Hemenway in his bedroom, in which he admitted his involvement in taking the Treasury check, was made within ten minutes after the entry and, as in
Dunaway,
*759
“[n]o intervening events broke the connection between petitioner’s illegal detention and the confession.”
Dunaway,
The third factor, “the purpose and flagrancy of the police misconduct” could be particularly important in some cases in influencing the suspect to make statements after an illegal arrest. However, in this instance, as in
Dunaway,
it was not. The closе causal relationship between the illegal arrest and the statements established by the first two factors require the conclusion that Johnson’s statements were “obtained by exploitation of the illegality of his arrest,”
Dunaway,
REVERSED.
Notes
. The Government argues that Johnson was permitted to drive his own automobile to the police station. Thus, Johnson did have a brief time away from the agents, but he went directly to the station, he did not consult an attorney or anyone else, and he was keenly aware that he had just admitted his involvement in the crime. He was not free to leave, but was required to go directly to the police station, Thus, he was not free from police influence for any significant period as in Wong Sun.
