UNITED STATES of America, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. Ronald Joseph BUTE, Defendant-Appellant. UNITED STATES of America, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. Beverly BUTE, a/k/a Beverly M. York, a/k/a Beverly M. Jensen, Defendant-Appellant.
Nos. 93-4193, 93-4222
United States Court of Appeals, Tenth Circuit
Dec. 23, 1994
In addition to the lack of standing, the record establishes that Christian consented to the search, after a lawful stop. The district court found that no threats of force or coercion were made and that the consent was entirely voluntary. These findings are not clearly erroneous.
The record establishes that the initial stop of the vehicle operated by Christian was not pretextual, that the subsequent detention was based on a reasonable suspicion of criminal activity; that Christian lacked standing to assert any Fourth Amendment right in the vehicle; and that, in any event, he voluntarily consented to the search of that vehicle. The denial of the motion to suppress is fully supported by the evidence found in the record, and that denial is AFFIRMED.
David J. Schwendiman (Scott M. Matheson, Jr., U.S. Atty., with him on the brief), Asst. U.S. Atty., Salt Lake City, UT, for plaintiff-appellee.
Ronald J. Yengich of Yengich, Rich & Xaiz, Salt Lake City, UT, for defendant-appellant in No. 93-4222.
Loni F. DeLand of McRae & DeLand, Salt Lake City, UT, for defendant-appellant in No. 93-4193.
Before ANDERSON, MCKAY and BRORBY, Circuit Judges.
BRORBY, Circuit Judge.
Defendants, Beverly and Ronald Joseph Bute (“the Butes“), bring this consolidated appeal challenging the district court‘s denial of their joint motion to suppress evidence allegedly obtained in violation of the
I
At roughly 11:00 p.m., on March 20, 1992, Deputy Salt Lake County Sheriff Daniel McConkey began his shift by taking Deputy Cannon, the Deputy he was relieving, home. On the way, both officers noticed an open garage door at 13180 South 2700 West, Salt Lake County, Utah (the Bute building). Cannon identified the Bute building as an old honey manufacturing plant, though McConkey testified he was not aware of the building‘s present use. McConkey described it as a “[c]inder block building, [with] a small window, which would be on the front of the building, on the south side, and there‘s a walk door and there‘s a garage door next to that.” The building was owned by Gene Fisher who had rented it to the Butes, though the officers were not aware of these facts.
The open garage door aroused some suspicion in McConkey because he had never seen anyone around the building before and never noticed the garage door was routinely left open. Nevertheless, McConkey did not stop but rather, continued to building. While in his vehicle, McConkey shined his bright lights and search light into the garage, illuminating it. He testified at the suppression hearing from that vantage point he could see the garage contained some shelves on one wall, a chair, and what he described as “normal garage type stuff, gas cans.” There was no vehicle in the garage, no indication that anyone was in or around the Bute building, and no sign of forced entry.
Nevertheless, and without articulating any reason, he suspected the building might have been vandalized or burglarized earlier and decided to enter the building in order to search for any indication of burglary or vandalism. He radioed to dispatch informing them he had “an open door” and “would be out to check it.” He did not, however, request a backup as is customary when an officer suspects a possible burglary or other threat to property in progress.1
When McConkey entered the building through the garage door, he noticed what he described as a “very pungent” and unusual odor which he could not identify. Along a single wall in the garage were three doors, all of which were closed or only slightly ajar. He opened the first door, shined his flashlight inside, and saw it was a furnace room. He moved on to the second door, opened it, and saw a living-type area which contained a bed or sofa, chairs, a table with an ashtray, and a television. He called out to see if anyone was there but got no response. He then moved to the third door. He observed a room with some glass beakers and bottles, some of which had rubber tubing connected to them, and a television monitor on the floor. McConkey testified upon observing the contents behind door number three, he suspected he had found a “lab of some sort.” However, he was unable to identify what sort of lab it was or connect the lab to any criminal activity.
Eventually, a search warrant was obtained based on the information provided by McConkey, Sergeant Wood, and the metro narcotics officers. The search executed pursuant to that warrant revealed the lab was used for the manufacture of methamphetamines. Subsequently, additional search warrants were obtained and executed at various locations including the nearby residence of the Butes.
The Butes were charged, and later indicted, for possession of methamphetamine with intent to distribute and manufacturing methamphetamine, both in violation of
The Butes entered conditional pleas of guilty and now bring this appeal arguing the magistrate judge‘s report and recommendation adopted a novel
II
The magistrate judge concluded none of the recognized exceptions to the warrant requirement offered by the government applied under the facts of this case. Nevertheless, the magistrate judge went on to analyze the constitutionality of McConkey‘s search under a general “reasonableness” test, taking into account the totality of the circumstances. Under that standard, the magistrate judge concluded the search was reasonable, and therefore, constitutionally permissible.3
Under the
While the magistrate judge was correct in observing that “reasonableness,” as the text of the
To the extent the magistrate judge‘s report can be read as an extension of Cady, we are of the opinion that the principle of Cady is inapplicable here. In Cady, the Supreme Court held that Wisconsin police officers who had arrested a Chicago police officer for drunk driving did not violate the
As the Ninth Circuit has recognized, ”Cady clearly turned on the ‘constitutional difference’ between searching a house and searching an automobile.” United States v. Erickson, 991 F.2d 529, 532 (9th Cir. 1993) (quoting Cady, 413 U.S. at 439). As such, the Erickson court held Cady restricted the community caretaking exception to searches not involving homes or offices. Erickson, 991 F.2d at 532. In doing so, it cited with approval the Seventh Circuit‘s refusal to extend the community caretaking exception to the warrantless search of a warehouse. Id. (citing United States v. Pichany, 687 F.2d 204, 209 (7th Cir. 1982)). The Seventh Circuit declined to extend Cady to the warrantless search of a warehouse on the grounds that:
[T]he plain import from the language of [Cady] is that the Supreme Court did not intend to create a broad exception to the
Fourth Amendment warrant requirement to apply whenever the police are acting in an “investigative,” rather than a “criminal” function. The Court intended to confine the holding to the automobile exception and to foreclose an expansive construction of the decision allowing warrantless searches of private homes or businesses. Pichany, 687 F.2d at 208-09.
We agree with this line of authority holding the community caretaking exception to the warrant requirement is applicable only in cases involving automobile searches. Thus, we conclude the community caretaking exception to the warrant requirement is inapplicable under the facts of this case.
III
On appeal, the prosecution argues McConkey‘s search of the Bute building was justified under the so-called “security check” exception to the warrant requirement as well as the exigency recognized for the protection of property. For the reasons that follow, we decline to recognize the security check exception to the warrant requirement of the
A
At least three state courts have held that law enforcement officials need not obtain a warrant in order to enter commercial premises, for the purposes of securing them, when they are found to be unlocked or otherwise open at night.5 The leading case, Alaska v. Myers, 601 P.2d 239 (Alaska 1979), involved two officers who routinely walked through the downtown area of Juneau checking for unlocked doors at commercial establishments. At 2:30 a.m., they observed an open door at the end of corridor leading from a
In permitting use of the evidence gathered as a result of the search, the Alaska Supreme Court noted none of the previously recognized exceptions to the warrant requirement were applicable under the facts. In recognizing a new exception to the warrant requirement, the court held:
[L]aw enforcement personnel may enter commercial premises without a warrant only when, pursuant to a routine after-hours security check undertaken to protect the interests of the property owner, it is discovered that the security of the premises is in jeopardy, and only when there is no reason to believe that the owner would not consent to such an entry. Id. at 244.
In California v. Parra, 30 Cal. App. 3d 729, 106 Cal. Rptr. 531, cert. denied, 414 U.S. 1116 (1973), the California Court of Appeals upheld the warrantless search of commercial building motivated by a desire to secure the premises. Id., 106 Cal. Rptr. at 533. The officer, responding to an “open door” call, entered the premises and in an effort to discover the owner of the business, searched through papers he found on the top of a desk. Finding nothing, he opened the desk drawers looking for information concerning the proprietor of the business. Instead, he found heroin.
The California court upheld the officer‘s entry on the grounds it would not have constituted a trespass under the law of torts, see id. at 533 (citing Restatement (Second) of Torts § 197), and thus, the officer‘s presence in the shop was “privileged.” Parra, 106 Cal. Rptr. at 533. In reaching this conclusion, however, the court did not mention the
Similarly, in Illinois v. Gardner, 121 Ill. App. 3d 464, 459 N.E.2d 676 (1984), as part of a routine check of businesses an officer discovered an open door to an automobile repair shop at 4:00 a.m. Following departmental policy, he entered the premises in order to search for intruders and ascertain the owner of the business. Id. at 678. Once inside, he observed a vehicle that was later determined to be stolen.
Relying on Myers and Parra, the Illinois Court of Appeals concluded that “law enforcement officials may enter an unsecured or unlocked commercial establishment during a nighttime security check to secure the premises and may take necessary measures to ascertain the identity of the proprietor.” Gardner, 459 N.E.2d at 680-81.
The
In our judgment, it is beyond question that some commercial properties are
The recognition that not all commercial establishments carry the same reasonable expectation of privacy creates an obvious problem for the security check exception to the warrant requirement. Indeed, this difficulty is even one that has been recognized by some courts that have adopted the exception. For instance, the Alaska Supreme Court in Myers correctly recognized that “[e]xpectations of privacy are not all of the same intensity.... Both subjectively and in society‘s judgment as to what is reasonable, distinctions may be made in the varying degrees of privacy retained in different places and objects.” Myers, 601 P.2d at 242 (footnotes omitted). We also agree with the observation that “[i]ndividual proprietors who, for any number of legitimate reasons, may not desire even the most cursory searches of their business premises at any time, are entitled to have their right to such privacy protected.” Id. at 243.
Yet the security check exception applies to all commercial establishments found unsecured—it makes no accommodation for the particular nature and circumstances surrounding individual buildings. Given this fact, we are of the opinion that the rule of Myers falters under the burden of its own reasoning. The security check exception to the warrant requirement permits entry onto premises based solely on the fact that a door is open or unlocked at night. There are no exceptions. As such, we have little difficulty concluding that the adoption of such a wholesale exception to the warrant requirement of the
B
The government next argues McConkey‘s entry into the Bute building was justified under the protection of property exigency recognized in Tyler, 436 U.S. 499.7 We agree with the government‘s admission that Tyler is not directly on point, but disagree with its contention that the underlying principle recognized in Tyler is broad enough to render the search at issue constitutionally permissible.
In Tyler, fire department officials responded to a report of a burning building. In the course of their efforts to combat the blaze, the firefighters observed two plastic containers of flammable liquid inside the building. The official responsible for determining the cause of the blaze was informed of this fact and, suspecting arson, entered the building to examine the containers and photograph the interior of the building. The official was forced to abandon his efforts due to excessive smoke and steam. After the fire was extinguished, the firefighters left the scene. They removed the two containers and brought
The Supreme Court first concluded the invasion of privacy that results from a fire official‘s entry into a commercial establishment is “clearly within the protection of the
While Tyler establishes the general principle that the need to protect property may justify a warrantless entry of premises, it is equally clear the application of that principle rests on a clear showing of an immediate need to protect property. The immediacy of the need for protection was so obvious in Tyler it required no elaboration or explanation.
Unlike a burning building, however, no evidence of any emergency or immediate threat to the Bute building was shown here. To put it simply, a burning building is not the same as an open garage door in terms of the immediacy of threat each presents. As such, the exigency identified in Tyler for the protection of property against an immediate threat is inapplicable here.
United States v. Moskow, 588 F.2d 882 (3rd Cir. 1978), similarly is inapplicable. In Moskow, the police, “responding to specific information of a surreptitious entry into a vacant building at a late hour of the night,” id. at 892, approached the building where they detected a strong odor of gasoline. The court held the fumes, taken together with the possibility that the reported intruder was either still in the building or had left a fuse or delay mechanism behind to ignite the gasoline, constituted an exigent circumstance justifying the warrantless entry into the building in order to protect the property. Id. at 892-93.
In contrast, McConkey had no information regarding a surreptitious entry into the Bute building. In addition, there was no indication whatsoever that an intruder was in the building or had left behind anything which posed a threat to McConkey or anyone else. In fact, McConkey testified he did not think anyone was in or around the building. He simply had a hunch that criminal activity might have occurred.
The government suggests the odor of gasoline in Moskow is analogous to the strong odor McConkey perceived upon entering the Bute building—both warranting further investigation as to source and possible danger created as a result. However, McConkey did not smell the odor from the Bute building until after he had entered it. The question we are confronted with here is whether his initial entry was constitutionally permissible. As such, anything he may have found or perceived after his entry is irrelevant to our inquiry as information obtained after the entry obviously cannot serve to justify entry in the first place.
The holdings of Tyler and Moskow unquestionably support the proposition that in some circumstances, the need to preserve and protect private property may create an exigency justifying the warrantless search of property. We are of the opinion that no such exigency existed here.
In this respect, United States v. Moss, 963 F.2d 673 (4th Cir. 1992), is instructive. In Moss, an officer of the United States Forest Service investigated an illegally parked car blocking access to a road. He approached a forest service cabin where he thought the owner of the vehicle might have been. He observed there was no lock on the cabin door and saw fresh bike tracks around the cabin. Id. at 675. Based on these facts, he entered the cabin out of three concerns: he thought the cabin may have been broken into; he
The Fourth Circuit addressed the government‘s argument that the entry of the cabin was justified to protect persons or property from immediately threatened harm. The court recognized the protection of property may constitute an exigency sufficient to permit police to “enter premises without warrants for such emergency purposes as aiding in fire-fighting, giving first aid to people in distress, protecting persons or property from threatened harm, and the like.” Id. at 678.
“To invoke this so-called ‘emergency doctrine,‘” the court held, “the person making entry must have had an objectively reasonable belief that an emergency existed that required immediate entry to render assistance or prevent harm to persons or property within.” Id. (citing Wayne v. United States, 318 F.2d 205, 211-12 (D.C. Cir.) (plurality opinion), cert. denied, 375 U.S. 860 (1963); Root v. Gauper, 438 F.2d 361 (8th Cir. 1971)); see also Smith, 797 F.2d at 840 (“the law enforcement officers must have reasonable grounds to believe that there is immediate need to protect their lives or others or their property or that of others“). The Moss court concluded while the officer‘s motivations were laudable, there was nothing about the circumstances presented supporting the officer‘s impression that an immediate threat to person or property existed, and therefore, the warrantless entry of the cabin was unreasonable. Id. at 840-41.
The same conclusion holds true under the facts of this case. We simply cannot accept the notion that an open door of a commercial building at night is, in and of itself, an occurrence that reasonably and objectively creates the impression of an immediate threat to person or property as to justify a warrantless search of the premises. McConkey observed an open garage door at a commercial establishment at 11:00 p.m. Whatever suspicion he had regarding the security of the building, it was not so great as to distract him from taking Cannon home. He did not know if the building was commercial, residential, or abandoned. He was ignorant of the building‘s current use and thus could not have known if the commercial activity potentially being conducted there required activity at night. While McConkey testified there was no indication that anybody was in the building, he could not have known for sure. He did not knock on the walk-up door to see if anyone would answer, nor did he attempt to reach any possible occupants of the building by telephone (as was departmental practice with “open door” inquiries). Rather, he simply observed a door to a commercial building was open and based on that fact, and that fact alone, decided to enter the building and search it for indicia of burglary or vandalism. While he suspected the building might have been vandalized or burglarized earlier, there was nothing to indicate that was the case apart from the open garage. Illuminating the garage, which undoubtedly was legal for him to do as it was open for all to see, see Florida v. Riley, 488 U.S. 445 (1989), revealed no evidence of foul play.
Based on these facts, we have little difficulty concluding whatever degree of suspicion or concern the open door may have reasonably aroused in McConkey, that suspicion falls far short of that needed to justify the warrantless entry into the Bute building. Nothing known to McConkey prior to his search supports an objective, reasonable belief that an emergency existed requiring the immediate entry into the Bute building to prevent harm to the building or its contents. To hold otherwise would require this court to either adopt the security check exception to the warrant requirement or stretch the principle of Tyler far beyond its intended and logical reach. This, we decline to do. Accordingly, we hold McConkey‘s warrantless search of the Bute building violated the
IV
In so holding, we are mindful both of an officer‘s desire to protect the citizens and property on his or her patrol and the public‘s
The evidence seized as a result of McConkey‘s unconstitutional search of the Bute building must be suppressed.8 Therefore, the ruling of the district court is REVERSED and the case remanded with instructions to the trial court to grant the motion to suppress and for such other and further proceedings as may be just and proper.
STEPHEN H. ANDERSON, Circuit Judge, dissenting:
The structure we are talking about in this case is described in defense Exhibit 1 admitted into evidence at the suppression hearing. Tr. at 38. Defense counsel acknowledged that the drawing is not to scale, and he inserted conclusory word descriptions which we disregard as unsupported by the testimony, and contrary to factual findings by the magistrate judge, R & R at 10, which are not clearly erroneous. Tr. at 35, 37. Additionally, in his testimony, Officer McConkey corrected the failure of the drawing to show a door from the small furnace room into the adjacent area. Id. at 35-36. The drawing, however, reveals some important facts bearing on the reasonableness of the officers’ entry; so I am attaching a copy.
According to Exhibit 1 and testimony at the hearing, the building is a very small single-story detached cinder block structure with a flat corrugated iron roof. There is a single, barred window in front, a door and a garage door about seven feet high and fourteen feet wide. Id. at 11. The drawing shows that the “garage” is actually a work area occupying the entire north side, and probably more than one-half of this small building. There are three small rooms on the south side of the structure. The rooms have no interconnecting doors or hallway. Rather, they open directly into the work area, so the only way to go from one room to the other is to go into the work area. The rooms are, therefore, auxiliary to the work area, not to each other. There is no lavatory, bath or shower, and no kitchen. Clearly, as the magistrate judge found, this is no residence, R & R at 10, and there is no evidence that anyone lived on the premises. Id. at 14. It is a small, light industrial structure—a commercial building, as the lower court found, as shown by its analysis, id. at 15-30, and direct statement. Id. at 25. Furthermore, when Officers McConkey and Cannon drove past the building, Officer Cannon identified it as “the old honey manufacture.” Tr. at 10-11. The dominant feature of this small commercial building, both by the space it occupies, and the configuration of the rooms which open off the space instead of into each other, is the “garage” or work area.
When officers McConkey and Cannon, on a routine patrol schedule, drove past this unlighted commercial building at approximately 11:15 p.m., they saw that the “garage” door was open, noting that that was an abnormal circumstance, especially at night. Officer McConkey knew from ten years’ personal experience in the area that the open door was unusual. He had never seen it open before, and had never seen “anybody around what was a business.” Id. at 9, 11.
With the “garage” door up, this structure and its contents were almost entirely exposed and accessible to anyone. One of the interior doors was partly open. It was the middle of the night. The commercial nature of the building and the fact that it was dark and appeared deserted caused the officer on patrol to investigate. That investigation was limited to shining a flashlight, looking, and assessing if anyone was there. Nothing was touched; the officer did not rummage through any of the building‘s contents. He only looked.
The officer conducted this check of the premises to protect the owner‘s property and safeguard the community, not to search for evidence against the owner or tenant. The average citizen will be dumbfounded at the notion that this officer was prohibited by the Federal Constitution from checking on the safe condition of these premises, under these circumstances, in the manner described. Subsequent thirty-second entries by Officer McConkey‘s supervisor, and a single narcotics officer, and a brief entry by the hazardous materials team did nothing to enlarge the scope of the original entry by Officer McConkey. There was no rummaging. Then a warrant was promptly sought, as early as 3:00 a.m.
Society would not only tolerate this level of intrusion into a mostly open commercial building at night, it would demand it.
A
It is questionable whether the
Although at one time the concept of “search” hinged on principles of physical intrusion or trespass, see, e.g., Boyd v. United States, 116 U.S. 616 (1886), over the last several decades, the presence or absence of a physical intrusion has ceased to be the focal point of
But assuming arguendo that the
[M]ost police efforts have been directed at making their presence felt to the maximum
It is also a recognized fact that the police perform this patrol and check function as a result not just of community expectation but community pressure. Thus, “commercial interests, for example, typically want more time devoted to checking the security of their establishments....” Id. § 1-2.1. In short, checking out commercial premises inexplicably left not just unlocked but wide open in the middle of the night is not an activity society tolerates; it is one society demands. See Wayne R. LaFave, Search and Seizure: A Treatise on the
State courts have long recognized that security checks by patrolling officers in no way offend the reasonableness requirement of the
Regardless, it is beyond dispute that the Supreme Court has recognized that police officers perform a community caretaking function wholly separate from the detection and arrest of criminals. Cady v. Dombrowski, 413 U.S. 433, 439 (1973); see also United States v. King, 990 F.2d 1552, 1560 (10th Cir. 1993). While the Court has not explicitly extended this self-evident concept to security checks of commercial premises, it has not ruled that such a function would violate the
This latter restriction in the scope of the entry is one of the reasons why I do not accept the premise of the majority that, for instance, the confidentiality of law firm files might be compromised by the entry through an open door of a patrolling officer anxious to check on the safety of the property. Rummaging is not part of a security check, and it is absent in this case.
In any event, I see no reason why this case requires us to adopt or reject a broad “security check” exception to the warrant requirement covering every imaginable situation. I summarize where I began:
We are not dealing with any of the hypotheticals postulated by the majority—only with the reasonableness of Officer McConkey‘s entry into a dark, wide-open commercial building, in the middle of the night, to shine his flashlight around for the purpose of protecting the premises. He did no rummaging, conducted no search for evidence. If the
B
The appellants have waived any separate argument on appeal that the subsequent entries by McConkey‘s supervisor, Sergeant Wood, Officer Lyman of the narcotics squad and technician Kevin Greer of the Salt Lake County Fire Department‘s Hazardous Materials Unit, violated the
However, assuming for purposes of argument that we have a real issue before us separately challenging the reasonableness of the subsequent entries, that issue must also be resolved in favor of the district court‘s denial of the motion to suppress.
As explained above, the recognizable privacy expectations of these lessees were reduced to begin with because of the commercial nature of the premises. These expectations were further diminished by the fact that they (apparently) left the building literally wide open.
Officer McConkey lawfully, as I contend, checking the well-being of the owner‘s property, saw the room full of laboratory equipment, and could smell and taste from the air its chemical product. At that point what little expectation of privacy the lessee‘s had in the lab room was already lost. It is hard to explain on any practical basis how subsequent officers’ confirming observations of the same thing McConkey saw, smelled, and tasted constituted any more than a de minimus intrusion on what was no longer private. This is so regardless of the difference in their reasons for looking at what McConkey had already looked at.
The Fifth Circuit, for example, has previously noted that
the fourth amendment protects the citizen against invasion of privacy. Once that interest is invaded legally by a [government agent], the citizen has lost his reasonable expectation of privacy to the extent of the invasion. As this court has held repeatedly, additional investigators or officials may therefore enter a citizen‘s property after one official has already intruded legally. Vance v. United States, 676 F.2d 183, 188 n. 8 (5th Cir. 1982); see, e.g., United States v. Brand, 556 F.2d 1312, 1317 (5th Cir. 1977) (concluding that when one law enforcement official justifiably enters dwelling without a
warrant, later arrivals “may join their colleagues even though the exigent circumstances justifying the initial entry no longer exist“), cert. denied, 434 U.S. 1063 (1978); United States v. Green, 474 F.2d 1385, 1390 (5th Cir.) (“Where a lawful intrusion has already occurred ... invasion of privacy is not increased by an additional officer ... who is an expert in identifying the type of contraband discovered, entering the premises to confirm the belief of the officer and to take custody of the evidence.“), cert. denied, 414 U.S. 829 (1973).
Two further facts in this case-by-case, fact-intensive inquiry, support the de minimus additional intrusion argument. First, there was no rummaging. The individuals who subsequently entered the building did not appreciably expand the scope of what Officer McConkey did at the outset. No drawers were opened; there was no search of papers or other effects or paraphernalia. The other officers only observed what McConkey observed, in plain view. There is no evidence to the contrary proffered by the defense. McConkey looked; the others looked—all at the same thing.
The intrusion was further minimized by the limited number of people who entered the structure. Although several different groups responded to the hazardous situation, only a few individuals actually entered the building. Sergeant Wood walked into the open area for about thirty seconds. Narcotics Officer Lyman was the only agent from metro narcotics to enter the structure, also for about thirty seconds. Tr. at 20-21. Hazardous materials team members were at the scene, but no testimony was elicited about the details of their entry. The affidavit mentions only Greer. The remaining officers, including officers from the Utah Division of Investigations who subsequently arrived, apparently never entered the premises and secured the building from the outside. Def.‘s Ex. 2, Attach. C ¶ 12.
Second, the events were reasonably related in time, considering that it was the middle of the night, and brief. Officer McConkey was in the building for three to four minutes. R & R at 10. Sergeant Wood arrived about ten to fifteen minutes later, Tr. at 40, and, as indicated above, was in the building only thirty to forty-five seconds. R & R at 10. Officer Lyman of narcotics was in the building only thirty to forty-five seconds. Apparently, technician Kevin Greer was in the building only enough longer to look at labels on some containers, draw a building diagram, and take a sample of the air. There is no evidence showing when officer Lyman and technician Greer arrived on the scene, but it would not have been more than an hour or two at the outside because a search warrant was applied for as early as 3:00 a.m. Id. at 11. It is noteworthy that the defense made no issue of the time interval as regards the arrival of Lyman and Greer, and introduced no evidence on the subject. Thus, as indicated above, I regard any argument on elapsed time as waived.2
These entries, in my opinion, were not unreasonable under the
