Appellant Russell Dean Jones was convicted on three charges of firearms violations and sentenced to a prison term of thirty months. On this direct appeal Jones contends that the district court erred in denying his pretrial motion to suppress evidence seized during a warrantless entry into his apartment. The district court held that the entry was justified by “exigent circumstances” that obviated the need to obtain a warrant. Since we do not believe that the conclusion reached by the district court is erroneous, we affirm the convictions.
PACTS
On December 30, 1979, at approximately 1:40 a. m., the Police Department of Prior Lake, Minnesota, received reports that a man had been seen firing shots down Main Street, and that he had then staggered into the doorway to the second floor apartment over a Main Street store. The citizen who furnished this information also informed the police that he had not seen anyone else enter or leave the apartment during these events. The police officers responding to the call were aware that the apartment was rented to Russell Dean Jones, and that Jones had a prior felony conviction stemming from a shooting incident. The officers did not, however, have any information indicating that Jones was the person who had fired the shots or had entered the apartment.
After blocking off the area in front of the building containing the apartment, the police confirmed, with the building owner, that Jones lived in the apartment and that the front door was the only entrance to the premises. They then obtained Jones’ telephone number and attempted to communicate by telephone with anyone who may have been in the apartment. The call went unanswered, but the officers could hear loud music emanating from within the *1359 apartment. The officers then determined that the front door was locked. They knocked loudly on the door several times, but again received no response. The officers proceeded to resort to a public address system to attempt to persuade the occupants of the apartment, if there were any, to emerge. After this effort proved unsuccessful, the police telephoned the landlord of the building and requested that he make available the keys to the apartment.
While the police were waiting for the landlord, Michael Pehrson, Jones’ roommate, arrived at the scene. The officers apprised Pehrson of the situation, and requested that he provide them with access to the apartment. Pehrson refused to let the officers use his key, but offered instead to go into the apartment alone to check on the wellbeing of his roommate or any other occupant. The police declined this offer, and explained that they “didn’t know whether [Jones] was still shooting, or if he had shot himself or if he would shoot [Pehr-son] if [Pehrson] walked in.”
The landlord soon arrived, but he apparently did not have a key to unlock the front door. Consequently, the police decided to force the door open, and they entered the building. This initial entry did not occur until approximately one hour after the police had arrived at the building. The police explained the decision to force their way into the building by stating that they “were immediately concerned for the community, for Mr. Jones, and for anybody up in the apartment with Mr. Jones.” Once inside, the officers climbed the stairway leading to the door to the apartment itself, and discovered that this door was also locked. The officers pounded on this door for several minutes, and also yelled in order to identify themselves over the blaring music. There was still no response. While knocking on the door, the officers smelled the acrid odor of something burning. As a result, they asked the landlord for a key to open the door to the apartment. The landlord furnished the police with the key, and the officers entered the apartment. There they observed Jones lying prone on the living room sofa, his legs straight out and his head thrown back. He appeared to be either asleep or unconscious. Three guns were also plainly evident in the room. When the police traced the source of the burning odor, they found a smoldering pan on a lighted stove. The police did not immediately seize the weapons, nor did they search the apartment any more than was necessary to locate the source of the burning smell. Instead, one officer departed to secure a search warrant. Jones was arrested and later indicted for violations of 18 U.S.C. §§ 922, 924 (1976), statutes dealing with the unlawful possession of firearms.
During pretrial proceedings Jones moved to suppress all observations made by the officers, as well as the evidence seized by them, on the ground that the entry into the apartment was made without a warrant. The district court concluded, after carefully reviewing the facts, that an emergency had existed at the time the officers sought access to the apartment, thus justifying their warrantless entry. In support of this holding, the district judge declared that 1) the police reasonably could have concluded that citizens and police officers in the vicinity of the apartment would be in danger if the occupant resumed firing the gun; 2) the police were justified in feeling pressing concern for the health and safety of the apartment occupant, given that the individual had been reported as staggering into the building; 3) the failure to elicit any response from inside the apartment augmented the officers’ concern for any occupant of the apartment; and 4) during the one-hour delay between arrival and entry no new facts came to the attention of the police suggesting that the danger had subsided. Under these circumstances, the district court concluded, the police had acted in a reasonable and prudent fashion in seeking to avoid entry by attempting to establish communication, and when that failed, in gaining entry with the landlord’s key rather than forcibly, and finally, in refraining *1360 from a full-scale search and seizure until a warrant had been obtained.
JONES’ MOTION TO SUPPRESS
Although the Fourth Amendment jurisprudence developed by the United States Supreme Court exhibits a strong preference for searches and entries conducted under the judicial auspices of a warrant,
1
the Court has crafted a few jealously and carefully drawn exceptions to the warrant requirement to cover those situations where “the public interest require[s] some flexibility in the application of the general rule that a valid warrant is a prerequisite for a search.”
Arkansas v. Sanders,
442 U.S.
753,
759,
Turning to the facts of the present case, it must be determined whether exigent circumstances similar to those set forth in the cases referred to above existed at the time the police arrived in the vicinity of Jones’ apartment and whether those circumstances continued to present themselves when the police forced open the front door approximately one hour later.
After reviewing the findings and statements of reasons advanced by the district judge, we are persuaded that the police reasonably believed that they faced an emergency. It is firmly established that a finding of exigent circumstances will not be disturbed unless it is clearly erroneous. See, e. g.,
United States v. Williams,
According to the standard announced by the Supreme Court, a finding is not clearly erroneous unless, after reviewing the entire evidence, the Court is left with the definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been committed.
United States
v.
United States Gypsum Co.,
In attacking the district judge’s denial of the motion, Jones emphasizes that the individual reported to be firing a g.un down Main Street was not suspected of having committed a felony,
2
and that the police received no report or other indication of injury to persons or property. Appellant points to
Dorman v. United States,
Jones also asserts that the one hour delay between the time the police first arrived at the scene and the moment they gained entry negates any belief the police may have had that the situation constituted an emergency. In this regard, appellant relies on
United States v. Houle,
In Houle the police delayed because they did not believe there was any danger or that the suspect would try to flee. The case at hand is distinguishable from Houle, because rather than intentionally stalling, the police were busily engaged in solving the problem, which they continued to believe was a dangerous one. Even though they did not have definite evidence that immediate emergency aid was necessary, see Root v. Gauper, supra, 4 or that a serious felony demanding immediate action had been committed, see Warden v. Hayden, supra, the police could reasonably have concluded, based on the reported shots, the lack of response from the apartment, the music indicating someone was in the apartment, and the burning smell, that the situation was a dangerous one. Any delay that occurred was primarily the result of careful police work, as the officers first sought to *1362 elicit a response from the suspect and then attempted to obtain a key in an effort to avoid a forcible entry. 5
This case is therefore far closer to
United States v. Picariello,
Appellant also argues that an emergency no longer existed once Pehrson, his roommate, arrived, because Pehrson offered to check on the situation in the apartment. The police acted sensibly, however, in not permitting Pehrson to enter the premises. It was the responsibility of the officers alone to insure the public safety and to investigate possible violations of the law, and so long as they believed a danger existed they should not have sent Pehrson into the source of the danger to carry out their duty for them.
For the foregoing reasons the judgment of the district court is affirmed.
Notes
.
Arkansas v. Sanders,
. Under Minnesota law, discharging a weapon in public is merely a misdemeanor. Minnesota law also requires a warrant before a person may be arrested on suspicion of having committed a misdemeanor. The state law requirement, however, does not override the exigent circumstances exception to the warrant rule, a standard derived directly from the Fourth Amendment.
. Dorman suggests that the type of offenses that would militate against a finding of exigent circumstances are nonviolent crimes such as gambling or narcotics offenses.
. Appellant’s reliance on Root is also misplaced. In Root the Court held that the police could not have entertained a good faith belief that they were faced with an emergency situation, because they knew the distressed victim had been removed from the premises in an ambulance. The Court noted that its conclusion was buttressed by the officers’ delay before making the warrantless entry. The present case is distinguishable from Root because the officers here had no reason to conclude that the emergency had subsided during the hour.
. The delay in this case is thus different from that in cases where the police deliberately waited for several hours, or where there was a showing that a warrant could easily have been obtained during the wait. See
Houle,
supra. This is also not a case where the police consciously sought to avoid the warrant requirement, see
United States v. Shye,
