Appellants Gillenwaters and Ramey here challenge the admission into evidence of narcotics and guns seized from their home pursuant to a search warrant. They contend the warrant was defective because the warrant affidavit was tainted by information obtained during an illegal search. The district court concluded that, although the affidavit contained tainted information, it still supported a finding of probable cause once the tainted material had been excised. We agree, and therefore affirm the conviction of the appellants.
I
An unusual chain of events led to the arrests of Susan Beth Gillenwaters and Mark Roger Ramey. On March 13, 1986, police responded to a report of a stabbing at their home. A visiting friend was the victim; they were not present. Officer Brian Hager arrived while paramedics were still tending the woman’s wounds. He briefly questioned her. He also observed a glass dish with a tightly rolled dollar bill, a plastic straw cut to four or five inches in length, a “roach” clip, and a leather “Iron Riders” motorcycle club jacket adorned with captain’s bars in the living room/dining room area where the victim lay. After she was taken to the hospital, Officer Hag-er remained in the house to await the arrival of crime scene technicians and the residents. When Gillenwaters returned home, Hager suggested she cheek to make sure nothing had been taken, and followed her as she went through the house. He observed a gun cabinet in a bedroom, other handguns, a mirror and razor blade, a small pipe with ash residue, and some plastic bags in a jewelry box. No valuables were missing, and Hager left the house.
Hager contacted Narcotics Detective George Hein, whose notes from the conversation indicated that there were “massive guns” in the residence. The district court found that Hager could not have supplied this information if he and other officers had remained in the living room/dining room crime scene prior to Gillenwaters’ return.
Police subsequently decided to search the house. Detective Hein prepared an affida *681 vit, relying largely on Hager’s observations. Another police officer supplied information concerning the reputation of the Iron Riders for lawlessness and records of telephone calls from the cycle club headquarters to the Gillenwaters/Ramey home. The affidavit also stated that the stabbing suspect told police that he had gone to the house to buy drugs. 1 Based on this affidavit, a search warrant was issued and later executed. Police seized the motorcycle jacket, weapons, cash, a scale, and a locked concealed safe that was later found to contain 458 grams of methamphetamine.
Gillenwaters and Ramey were arrested and charged in state court with possession of a controlled dangerous substance and possession with intent to distribute, in violation of Md.Ann.Code art. 27, §§ 286, 287. However, the prosecution was dismissed after the court granted the appellants’ motion to suppress the seized evidence. Gil-lenwaters and Ramey were subsequently indicted on federal charges of conspiracy to possess controlled dangerous substances and possession with intent to distribute, both violations of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1). The district court initially indicated it too would grant a suppression motion, but later reversed itself and denied the motion. Gillenwaters and Ramey were convicted after a bench trial. 2 They appeal, challenging district court holdings that (1) the tainted evidence could be excised from the affidavit; (2) the material remaining in the affidavit supported probable cause for the search warrant; and (3) Officer Hager’s initial view of the premises was justified by exigent circumstances. We affirm.
II
In
Franks v. Delaware,
Knowingly including a false statement in a warrant affidavit seems the functional equivalent of (if not an even more serious transgression than) including in the affidavit knowledge of facts illegally obtained. Logically, then, the [evidence] that [was] improperly included in the warrant affidavit here should be dealt with in a similar fashion, i.e., [it] should be set to one side (as the district court did) and the remaining content of the affidavit examined to determine whether there was probable cause to search, apart from the tainted averments.
United States v. Veillette,
That is precisely the course pursued by the district court in the case at bar-it excised all information Hager might have obtained by conducting an unauthorized search of the house or observing Gillenwa-ters as she conducted her own search, at his behest, to make sure the assailant had not stolen anything. This was not error. Indeed, it comports with the Supreme Court's admonition that, "while the government should not profit from its illegal activity, neither should it be placed in a worse position than it would otherwise have occupied." Murray v. United States,
The appellants argue that the taint of the illegal search permeated the affidavit. They claim the averments remaining after excision of the tainted material were insufficient to support a finding of probable cause. But this is how the district court described the contents of the affidavit after redaction:
[W]hat you are left with is a suspect who says he went there to buy drugs, an outlaw motorcycle gang membership and officership, established by the captain’s bars, the activities of the outlaw gang with regard to their propensity to engage in illegal activity, and also the calls from there to the house of this particular individual are noted there; and there was also evidence seen in the living room of the roach clip and the other narcotics paraphernalia, which included the rolled-up dollar bill sitting in a glass dish, and the roach clip, and the straw; and this would be enough, it seems to me, to establish that there was probable cause....
We agree with the district court’s conclusion that the totality of the circumstances presented in the untainted portion of the affidavit supports a finding of probable cause to issue the search warrant.
See Illinois v. Gates,
Finally, we find no merit in the contention that Officer Hager’s observations of items in plain view in the living room/dining room constituted an improper warrantless search. Hager was responding to an emergency call; he arrived while the victim was still receiving emergency medical treatment on the scene; he attempted to obtain evidence from her concerning her assailant. His presence was unquestionably justified by exigent circumstances, and his observations&emdash;made in the room where the victim lay bleeding&emdash;fall within the scope of the plain view doctrine.
See Mincey v. Arizona,
*683 In view of the above, the decision of the district court is affirmed.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The suspect had been apprehended within minutes of the stabbing.
. Gillenwaters was sentenced to 18 months imprisonment, with all but six months suspended provided she served her time in a jail-type or treatment institution, on work release. She was also sentenced to five years probation. Ramey was sentenced to 18 months imprisonment and 40 months probation. Both appellants were released pending the outcome of this appeal.
.This is essentially an extrapolation from the Court’s holding in
Wong Sun v. United States,
.
See also United States v. Smith,
The appellants contend several other circuit court opinions require a different outcome. But
United States v. Taheri,
