MemoRandum Opinion & Order
I. Introduction
The Government has charged defendant Gabriel Yanez with the unlawful possession of a short-barreled firearm in violation of 26 U.S.C. §§ 5841, 5861(d), & 5871. Houston Police Department (“HPD”) officers seized the sawed-off shotgun during a war-rantless search of the defendant’s home on October 24, 2006. Pending before the court is defendant’s motion to suppress the shotgun obtained during the search and any statements obtained in violation of Miranda and its progeny or the fruit of the poisonous tree doctrine. After considering the arguments of counsel, the testimony of record, and the applicable law, the court finds that the defendant’s motion should be DENIED in its entirety, except that the court defers a decision on the admissibility of the defendant’s second confession until further probative evidence is heard at trial outside the presence of the jury.
II. Factual and Procedural Background
On Tuesday, October 24, 2006, at approximately 5:50 p.m., HPD Lt. Stephen Casko and Officer Eric Blankenship were conducting an auto theft investigation in a southeast Houston neighborhood at the corner of Monroe and Almeda Genoa. Dkt. 30 at 7. At some point in the course of their investigation, they suddenly heard at least 30 gunshots coming from an area southwest of their location. Id. at 8. The officers left the area in unmarked cars, driving around the neighborhood and searching for the source of the gunfire. Id. As Blankenship proceeded to the scene, Casko was flagged down by a witness who was waving frantically and pointing to a nearby residence at 8403 Gullick Lane. Id. at 9. Casko asked the witness if that house was where the shots were coming from, and she confirmed that fact. Id. Casko then left his vehicle and ran to the residence where another witness, defendant’s sister Lizet Yanez (“Lizet”), was standing in the doorway. Id. at 10. According to Lt. Casko, Ms. Yanez was absolutely terrified and “[s]he was shaking” out of fright. See id. He inquired about what was going on, and Lizet responded that “somebody was shooting upstairs.” Id. Notably, Lizet did not identify the shooter or shooters who had threatened the community’s safe *768 ty. However, Casko did ask her who else was in the house, and she stated her sister was also present. Id. He queried where the sister was, and Lizet stated that she was upstairs. Id. He went upstairs and retrieved the other sister, Crystal Yanez (“Crystal”), who was coming out of her room at the top of the staircase. Id. Crystal was also extremely frightened, and she too said that “somebody was shooting in the house” and indicated that the gunfire was emanating from a room down the hall. Id. at 11-12, 37. He took both girls outside to safety, and he was met by Officer Blankenship shortly thereafter. Id. at 11. At the time, Lizet was twelve years old, and Crystal was nineteen. Id.
Once the girls were safely outside, the officers entered the home again and ran up the stairs. Id. at 12. As they advanced down the hallway to the location from which witnesses said gunshots were coming, they noticed a closed door which suddenly opened. Id. One of the two suspects, a 15 year-old juvenile named Ramiro Emilio Sanchez, emerged from the doorway with the defendant close behind him. Id. Casko walked up to the doorway, ordered the suspects to raise their hands, and handcuffed both of them, obviously doing so without an arrest warrant. Id. at 13-14. At this point, Sanchez was in the doorway and defendant Yanez was standing inside the room next to the bed. Id. at 14-16. Yanez could have easily reached the bed from the position in which he was standing. Id.
Lt. Casko searched Sanchez’s person, and Blankenship searched Yanez. Id. at 42. Casko then asked the arrestees “where is the gun?” Id. at 14. The defendant did not respond, but Sanchez stated that he didn’t have it. Id. Casko noticed a loaded clip for a pistol lying on the bed, and he asked the suspects where the absent pistol was. Id. Sanchez nodded toward the bed and said, “It’s under there.” Id. at 15. Believing that Sanchez indicated that the gun was under the mattress, Casko lifted up the edge of the mattress and saw a sawed-off shotgun with a pistol grip lying on the box spring at the foot of the bed near Casko’s leg, in close proximity to where Yanez was standing. 1 Id. That sawed-off shotgun, however, did not match the loaded clip, and Casko again asked Sanchez where the matching pistol was located. Id. at 19. Sanchez replied that it was wrapped in a blanket — when Casko unfurled the blanket, he found the clip’s mate, a Beretta .40 caliber pistol. Id. At the time, Casko was standing adjacent to the mattress, and Yanez was to his immediate right. Id. at 16. Yanez was standing 4 to 5 feet away from the bed. Id. Lt. Casko testified that the shotgun at the foot of the bed was within the defendant’s reach. Id. at 18.
After Casko secured the pistol and made sure that it was unloaded, the officers brought both of the suspects out of the house. Id. at 20. Both the shotgun and the pistol were left in the bedroom. The officers separated the susрects on both sides of Blankenship’s van and waited for Officer Drey’s patrol car to show up and transport the arrestees to the police station. Id. As they were waiting, Yanez repeatedly volunteered that the weapons were his alone, that he purchased them, and that Sanchez *769 should not be blamed for owning any of the discovered weapons. 2 Id. at 21.
Then, less than five minutes after the officers exited the home, the marked patrol car arrived to pick up the two suspects. Id. at 22. The officers secured them in the back of the vehicle and entered the home a third time. Id. Lt. Casko testified that he believed there were still weapons in the upstairs bedroom which had not been secured, and he did not know whether there was anyone else remaining in the home. Id. at 53. Casko was concerned that other persons could have still been in the home, either accomplices of the suspects or persons who could have been injured during the gunfire. See id. at 53-54. Casko obtained the older sister’s written consent to search the premises, and he seized the sawed-off shotgun from the upstairs bedroom. Id. аt 24-25. Additionally, he recovered the Beretta .40 caliber pistol and a Colt AR-15 rifle that was in the closet. Id. at 25. Based on the shots they heard earlier, the officers reasonably assumed that the rifle was the weapon that had recently been fired by the suspects. Id. at 54.
After Casko and Blankenship searched the premises for several minutes, Casko returned to the patrol car to speak with the defendant. Id. at 22. He Mirandized the defendant, 3 and the latter waived his rights. Id. at 22-23. Yanez repeated the same statements as before, specifically that the guns were all his and that he did not want Sanchez to be implicated for any crimes surrounding the gun ownership. Id. at 23. He explained numerous times that the guns were not stolen and that he legitimately owned the guns. Id. at 23-24. He also told Casko that he had cut the barrel off the shotgun himself, and that he had purchased the shotgun at a pawnshop. Id. at 24. Based on the defendant’s incul-patory admissions, the officers released Sanchez and transported Yanez to the police station.
Six weeks later, on December 7, 2006, a federal grand jury indicted Yanez for the knowing possession and receipt of a short-barreled firearm, in violatiоn of 26 U.S.C. §§ 5841, 5861(d), and 5871. See Dkt. 1. Defendant was arrested by federal authorities and appeared before Magistrate Judge Frances H. Stacy on December 13, 2006. Dkt. 14 at 1. The magistrate judge ordered the defendant released on a $30,000 unsecured bond. Id. As the case proceeded toward trial, defendant filed the instant motion to suppress, and the court held an oral hearing on April 30, 2007. See Dkt. 30. After the hearing, the defendant filed a supplemental memorandum of law in support of his motion to suppress. See Dkt. 31. The Government filed two additional responses, Dkts. 32 & 34, and the defendant replied to the Government’s second response to the motion. Dkt. 33. The court has carefully considered the parties’ extensive briefing on the entire panoply of constitutional issues, and the defendant’s motion to suppress is ripe for decision.
III. ANALYSIS
The defendant alleges that the sawed-off shotgun and related testimonial statements were obtained in violation of the Fourth and Fifth Amendments to the United
*770
States Constitution, respectively. He also argues that even if the court finds that the officers complied with the dictates of
Miranda
in their interrogation, the testimonial statements about the firearm should be suppressed as fruit of the poisonous tree discovered after the unconstitutional search for the weapon.
See Wong Sun v. United States,
A. The Fourth Amendment
The Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution provides in full:
The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.
U.S. Const, amend. IV. As the Supreme Court has succinctly stated: “[The Fourth Amendment] was a reaction to the evils of the use of the general warrant in England and the writs of assistance in the Colonies, and was intended to protect against invasions of the sanctity of a man’s home and the privacies of life from searches under indiscriminate, general authority.”
Warden v. Hayden,
In order to protect these interests and properly limit sovereign action in the area of search and seizure, the Supreme Court has adopted an “exclusionary rule” that requires the suppression of evidence obtained in violation of the Fourth Amendment.
See Weeks v. United States,
1. The First Warrantless Entry into the Home
The defendant contends that the arresting officers violated his Fourth Amendment rights through the entry into his home without a warrant. “It is a ‘basic principle of Fourth Amendment law’ that searches and seizures inside a home without a warrant are presumptively unreasonable.”
See Payton v. New York,
*771
Nevertheless, despite this broad language, the Court has permitted warrantless searches and seizures in a private dwelling if exigent circumstances justify the intrusion.
See Warden v. Hayden,
Here, before the officers entered defendant’s home, they faced a fluid, fast-moving situation in which the safety of the public was at risk as an unknown gunman fired a weapon from an upstairs bedroom. Such a situation presents the paradigmatic instance of exigent circumstances, in which the officers reasonably acted with haste to enter the premises and stop a shooting spree they reasonably believed was endangering neighborhood citizens. Accordingly, while warrantless entries into a home are presumptively unreasonable,
see Payton,
2. The Second Warrantless Entry into the Home
After the officers brought the defendant’s sisters to apparent safety, they returned inside the home to find and arrest those who were posing a serious risk to the officers and public safety. Once inside the defendant’s bedroom, the officers arrested the suspects and discovered the shotgun underneath the mattress. The defendant objects to the search for the weapon on two grounds: (1) that the seizure was not justified by exigent circumstances; and (2) that the seizure could not have been made incident to a lawful arrest because the police possessed nо probable cause to arrest the defendant for discharging a firearm in a metropolitan area, a misdemeanor under Texas law. The court will address these contentions in turn.
*772 a. Exigent circumstances
First, the Government defends the firearm search as necessary under exigent circumstances. The Supreme Court has held that once officials make a warrantless entry into a home based on reasons of exigency, they may lawfully search for the suspect and those areas where weapons might be hidden.
See Hayden,
In a case similar to
Hayden,
the Fifth Circuit has found exigent circumstances justifying a search “in the face of a serious and demonstrable potentiality for danger to the arresting officers.”
See United States v. Quigley,
In the light of hindsight, we know that the pistol underneath the mattress was beyond both her reach and that of the handcuffed arrestee [the defendant]; however, at the time of the arrest and of the query, for all the officers knew the weapon was within the reach of the girl or, even, of Quigley. The circumstance that the search took place within seconds of the arrest is further support for the conclusion that the attempt to locate the firearm was a reasonable and cursory check to protect the safety of the officers.
Id.
at 419. In a related case,
New York v. Quarles,
In the present case, the court finds that exigent circumstances warranted a search of the entire space in which the weapon(s) used to threaten the public might bе found.
See Hayden,
b. Search Incident to a Lawful Arrest
In the alternative, the court finds that the search under the mattress contemporaneous with the suspect’s arrest was a valid
Chimel
search, i.e., a search incident to a lawful arrest of the area within the defendant’s “immediate control.”
See Chimel v. California,
1. Probable Cause for the Arrest
If exigent circumstances demand a warrantless entry, as they did here, the officer may effect an arrest of a suspect if there is probable cause to believe that he is guilty of a crime.
See Olson,
Defendant states that the officers could not reasonably believe that there was a fair probability that he, rather than Mr. Sanchez, was the person firing the weapon on the premises. The court disagrees. By the defendant’s own admission, he does not contest that the officers had probable cause to believe
someone
was guilty of the misdemeanor of recklessly firing a weapon in the Houston city limits.
See
Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 42.12 (Vernon 2003) (prohibiting the reckless discharge of a firearm “inside the corporate limits of a municipality having a population of 100,000 or more”).
5
Also, the offense was unquestionably committed in the officers’ pres
*775
ence, as they heard the shots fired from the defendants’ general location before entering the defendant’s home, allowing a warrantless arrest to be made.
See Lago Vista,
In
Maryland v. Pringle,
The case at bar presents very similar circumstances to those in Pringle. Here, the officers approached a small bedroom from which they reasonably believed the shots were fired. They found two persons who cautiously emerged into the hallway, understandably raising the officers’ suspicion. At the time, the officers had no way to know whether one or both of the suspects had been firing the weapon. They only knew that a firearm had been discharged several times, but not by whom. As the officers came upon the room, it was thus reasonable for them to believe that either or both of the suspects had fired the weapon or had engaged in a joint venture to violate the law. Accordingly, the officers had probable cause to believe that this defendant, Gabriel Yanez, was guilty of an offense, and his arrest did not contravene the protections of the Fourth Amendment. 6
*776 2. The Defendant’s Reach
The defendant also argues that the search under the mattress cannot be justified by Chimel because that area was outside the' defendant’s immediate reach. The Government contends that the defendant, albeit in handcuffs at the time, could have easily accessed the area at the foot of the mattress with a quick lunge, and thus the search which discovered the weapon is constitutional under the Fourth Amendment. The court agrees with the Government.
When a police officer makes a war-rantless arrest, he or she may search the arrestee’s person and “the area ‘within his immediate control’ — construing that phrase to mean the area from within which he might gain possession of a weapon or destructible evidence.”
Chimel,
In the case of a handcuffed suspect, the restraints obviously limit “the area into which an arrestee might reach in order to grab a weapon or evidentiary items.”
Chimel,
[Defendant assumes] that, by handcuffing a suspect, the police instantly and completely eliminate all risks that the suspect will flee or do them harm. As is sadly borne out in the statistics for police officers killed and assaulted in the line of duty each year, however, this assumption has no basis in fact. Handcuffs are a temporary restraining device; they limit but do not eliminate a person’s ability to perform various acts. They obviously do not impair a person’s ability to use his legs and feet, whether to walk, run, or kick. Handcuffs do limit a рerson’s ability to use his hands and arms, but the degree of the effectiveness of handcuffs in this role depends on a variety of factors, including the handcuffed person’s size, strength, bone and joint structure, flexibility, and tolerance of pain. Albeit difficult, it is by no means impossible for a handcuffed person to obtain and use a weapon concealed on his person or within lunge reach, and in so doing to cause injury to his intended victim, to a bystander, or even to himself. Finally, like any mechanical device, handcuffs can and do fail on occasion.
See United States v. Sanders,
The instant case is quite similar to Hernandez. Because the sawed-off shotgun was at the foot of the bed near the edge of the mattress, and the defendant was 4 to 5 feet away from that spot at the time of the arrest, the weapon was in Yanez’s “immediate control” despite the handcuffs’ limitation. The weapon was indeed not as readily accessible as the gun in Helmstetter, beneath the defendant’s chair. However, the court finds that the shotgun was within the area under the defendant’s immediate control or his lunge reach, and thus the search did not violate the defendant’s Fourth Amendment protections.
3. The Third Warrantless Entry into the Home
Lastly, the defendant argues that the “officers’ third, warrantless entry into the home — after placing both Mr. Yanez and Mr. Sanchez in a patrol car — and their subsequent return to the bedroom (where they actually, рhysically seized the shotgun) were not justified by exigent circumstances.” See Dkt. 31 at 9. The Government vehemently disagrees with this characterization of events, arguing that the officers entered the home the third time “to recover the firearms that they had already discovered in the room.... The officers would have been grossly negligent to leave the firearms inside the house.” 7 See Dkt. 32 at 2. Indeed, the court agrees that leaving the weapons inside a home where the police had not ensured that all suspects had been removed posed a continuing threat to the public and the officers, presenting an exigency that justified the officers’ third entry. Thus, the Government has demonstrated that the warrantless search and seizure of the shotgun was reasonable and is valid under the Fourth Amendment.
As stated above, the Government has the burden to prove the existence of exigent circumstances.
See Maldonado,
“The Fourth Amendment does not require police officers to delay in the course of an investigation if to do so would gravely endanger their lives or the lives of others.”
Hayden,
Q. [Mr. Hileman]: After you took these two suspects out of the house, did you know if there was anyone else in the house?
A. [Lt. Casko]: We didn’t know. No.
See
Dkt. 30 at 53. Casko and Blankenship had to reenter the home, only minutes after securing the suspects, in order to search for any undisclosed accomplices and seize any weapons that could be used against them. In short, their actions to enter the home and seize accessible weapons, including the shotgun, were reasоnable and necessary, as an undisclosed accomplice could have recovered the weapons and threatened the surrounding community at any moment. To behave differently would have been, in the Government’s words, “grossly negligent.”
See
Dkt. 32 at 2;
see also Hopkins v. Alabama,
In Hopkins, the Fifth Circuit found a similar search to be justified by exigent circumstances. In that case, four policemen visited a home in Huntsville, Alabama on January 6, 1971, to investigate a robbery which occurred earlier that same day. Id. at 474. One of the detectives knocked on the door, an action which was answered by gunshots fired from within the home, obviously threatening the safety of the officers and neighbors. Id. Several people exited the house in the rear and were arrested and searched. Id. The officers threw tear gas into the house, and Jerry Wayne Hopkins emerged through the front door. Id. He too was arrested and searched. Id. None of these searches produced the weapon which was used to fired on the officers. Id. The officers then entered the home without a warrant, searched the premises, and discovered a .32 caliber automatic pistol. Id. Hopkins was sentenced to 20 years in prisоn for assaulting a peace officer with a deadly weapon. Id. In determining that the contested search was based on exigent circumstances, the Fifth Circuit stated the following:
While Hopkins was arrested outside the house his presence there was the direct result of tear gas fired into the house to dislodge the shooter or shooters who were firing on the surrounding officers. The search of the house was made immediately after Hopkins was driven out and arrested. Since the gun had not been found before the search, the officers could have reasonably feared that the weapon and its user still remained in the house. The immediate need to ensure that no one remained in the house preparing to fire the yet unfound weapon obviously justified this warrantless search.
See id. at 475 (emphasis added).
Like the officers’ need to enter the home to secure the premises in
Hopkins,
Officers Casko and Blankenship had no reasonable option but to reenter Yanez’s residence and retrieve the weapons and ensure that every potential participant in Yanez’s criminal endeavor had been subdued. And while
Hopkins
involved a situation in which the weapon’s user necessarily remained in the home before the search,
*779
and Yanez and Sanchez had been removed from the home before the officers’ third entry in this case, Casko and Blankenship “could have reasonably feared” that another accomplice may still have been inside the premises that had not yet been fully searched in the exigencies of the moment.
8
See id.; cf. Mincey v. Arizona,
4. Conclusion
All three of the officers’ entries into the home were made under exigent circumstances, and the scope of the searches matched the exigency.
See Tamez v. City of San Marcos, Tex.,
B. The Fifth AmeNdment
Defendant also seeks the exclusion of the statements made to the police after his arrest. He contends that these statements were the product of unwarned questioning and the admission of such statements would violate
Miranda’s
Fifth Amendment requirements.
See United States v. Patane,
1. The First Set of Statements
The Supreme Court’s seminal
Miranda
decision requires the familiar warnings of a suspect’s right to silence and counsel to be given whenever there is “questioning initiated by law enforcement officers after a person has been taken into custody or otherwise deprived of his freedom of action in any significant way.”
Miranda v. Arizona,
By its terms, the
Miranda
decision only applies to custodial
“questioning
initiated by law enforcement officers.”
Miranda,
This broad formulation, however, is not subject to commensurate, broad application. For example, after announcing the test, the
Innis
Court found that the facts of that case did not evidence any police interrogation.
Id.
at 302,
In this case, the Government asserts, and Lt. Casko testified, that the defendant made his incriminating statements spontaneously and voluntarily to prevent his cohort from being implicated in the crime.
See
Dkt. 18 at 6 (“All of the statements should be admitted at trial against the defendant because they were made by the defendant spontaneously and not in response to interrogation of him by [the] officers.”);
see also
Dkt. 30 at 20-21. The court agrees with the Government and rejects Ramiro Sanchez’s testimony to the contrary. The court finds that Yanez made the first round of incriminating statements outside the pressures of traditional police interrogation or its “functional equivalent.”
Innis,
2. The Second Set of Statements
With regard to the defendant’s second round of statements, however, judging their constitutionality is much more problematic. Although the Government argues that these statements were made spontaneously,
see
Dkt. 18 at 6, the eviden-tiary record belies this assertion. Lt. Cas-ko testified that he Mirandized the defendant when he returned outside after the third entry and “spoke to him in the car.”
See
Dkt. 30 at 22. This statement clearly bears the hallmarks of custodial questioning, even if it was not performed in the traditional station house setting. For these statements to be admissible under
Miranda,
the Government has the burden to demonstrate that the officers warned the defendant of all of his constitutional rights inherent within the Fifth Amend
*782
ment and that the defendant made a knowing, intelligent, and voluntary waiver thereof.
See Miranda,
Here, Lt. Casko testified that he Mirandized defendant and gave him the first three of the warnings enumerated above and that the defendant waived these Miranda rights. Dkt. 30 at 22-23. However, the Government did not demonstrate that Casko administered the fourth warning, that is, that Yanez had a right to appointed counsel’s presence during any custodial interrogatiоn. The defendant argues that this failure means that the statements are categorically inadmissible at trial. See Dkt. 31 at 14. In response, the Government contends that Lt. Casko read the Miranda warnings to the defendant from a card, and that any omission in Casko’s testimony was inadvertent and can be corrected through further testimony. See Dkt. 34 at 2. However, Lt. Casko did not testify at the suppression hearing that he read the defendant his rights from a card. The court agrees that further testimony is necessary to decide the issue of the admissibility of the defendant’s statements made to Lt. Casko in Officer Drey’s car. Thus, the court defers a decision on the Miranda issue related to these statements until further testimony from Lt. Casko is obtained at trial outside the presence of the jury.
3. Conclusion
The record demonstrates that the defendant’s first confession was made voluntarily and spontaneously, avoiding any concerns of coercive conduct that mandated Miranda’s prophylactic rule. Nevertheless, the record in its current state is insufficient to allow the court to make an informed decision on the admissibility of the defendant’s second confession. Accordingly, the defendant’s first round of statements is admissible at trial, and the court reserves a ruling on the admissibility of the second of round of statements pending further testimony from Lt. Casko at trial outside the jury’s presence.
*783 C. The Fruit of the Poisonous Tree Doctrine
Finally, the defendant seeks the exclusion of his testimonial statements as illegal fruit derived from the previous, causally-connected search.
See Wong Sun v. United States,
We need not hold that all evidence is fruit of the poisonous tree simply because it would not have come to light but for the illegal actions of the police. Rather, the more apt question in such a case is whether, granting establishment of the primary illegality, the evidence to which instant objection is made has been come at by exploitation of that illegality or instead by means sufficiently distinguishable to be purged of the primary taint.
Id. (internal quotation marks omitted).
In this case, the subsequent statements about the weapon and defendant’s ownership were unquestionably the product of the weapon’s discovery in the immediate past. However, the court has already found that the search and seizure of the shotgun did not violate the Fourth Amendment. Accordingly, there is no “primary taint” which infects the subsequent statements to the police, and the derivative evidence doctrine is inapplicable to this case.
IV. Conclusion
After police arrested the defendant in his home for recklessly firing a weapon in a metropolitan area, they obtained physical and testimonial evidence tending to prove defendant’s guilt. Defendant has moved to exclude this evidence from his upcoming trial on three grounds: (1) The Fourth Amendment’s prohibition of unreasonable searches and seizures; (2) The Fifth Amendment’s Miranda doctrine requiring the exclusion of unwarned statements given during custodial interrogation; and (3) The Supreme Court’s derivative evidence doctrine requiring the exclusion of evidence tainted by a previous illegality. The Court finds that, as to the Fourth Amendment challenges, the shotgun obtained in the room is admissible because of the exigent circumstances involved. The police reasonably searched for all items which had been used, and might be used again, to threaten public safety. Thus, the sawеd-off shotgun, seized during a lawful search, is not subject to exclusion.
As to the Fifth Amendment challenges, the defendant’s initial statements were volunteered outside any police interrogation, as that term is defined by the Supreme Court for Miranda purposes. Consequently, these statements are admissible at trial. As to the second confession, the Government has not demonstrated that it was made after a voluntary waiver of every Miranda right, but the court agrees with the Government that this failure may have been an oversight at the suppression hearing. Accordingly, the court will defer a ruling on the admissibility of the defendant’s second round of statements’ until further testimony is elicited at trial outside the presence of the jury.
Lastly, because the court concludes that the shotgun was discovered lawfully, there is no reason to apply the judicially-created fruit of the poisonous tree doctrine.
For the foregoing reasons, the defendant’s motion to suppress is DENIED in its entirety, except that the court reserves ruling on the issue of the admissibility of the second round of statements pending further factual development.
It is so ORDERED.
Notes
. This fact, the lifting of the mattress and the disсovery of the shotgun contemporaneous with the arrest, was disputed at the suppression hearing. Ramiro Sanchez testified that the Casko’s recollection of events was incorrect, and neither Casko nor Blankenship lifted the mattress and discovered the shotgun immediately after the suspects were handcuffed. Dkt. 30 at 61. Nevertheless, the court finds that due to his admitted biases in favor of the defendant, see id. at 65, Sanchez’s testimony is less than credible, and the court instead credits Casko’s version of events in this matter.
. Although Sanchez testified that Yanez made these statements in response to police questioning, see id. at 62, the court finds that Yanez's statements were indeed volunteered and not the product of any custodial interrogation. Yanez did not testify at the suppression hearing and the court discredits Sanchez’s testimony for the reasons stated above.
. At the suppression hearing, Lt. Casko testified that he advised Yanez of three of the four Miranda rights, but he did not address whether he advised Yanez that he had a right to appointed counsel if he could not afford to retain counsel for questioning. See Dkt. 30 at 22-23.
.
See Terry v. Ohio,
. Defendant argues that this offense is "relatively minor” and cites
Welsh v. Wisconsin,
. Because the court holds that the officers had probable cause to arrest the defendant, it need not address at length defendant’s argument that the handcuffing of the defendant was a Terry-style temporary detention. The defendant's seizure bore the hallmarks of an actual arrest as viewed by a reasonable person, including the limitation of his liberty through handcuffs, and his seizure was predicated upon evidence creating more than a reasonable suspicion of wrongdoing. Thus, this seizure resulted in defendant's custody
*776
and actual arrest.
See United States v. Courtney,
. In the Government's Second Response to Defendant’s Motion to Suppress,
see
Dkt. 32 at 3, it alternatively defends the third entry and subsequent search on the basis of Crystal Yanez's consent. The Government reiterates this position in its Third Response to Defendant's Motion to Suppress.
See
Dkt. 34 at 1. However, while the development of the record regarding the voluntariness of the consent, which the Government bears the burden to prove,
see Schneckloth v. Bustamonte,
. The defendant cites two cases involving what he deems wеre similar searches and which were found unconstitutional as lacking any justifiable exigency.
See
Dkt. 31 at 6-10 (citing
United States
v.
Ford,
