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Opinions of The and the Court of Appeals To be used in
conjunction with the CPS Criminal Procedure Textbook |
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CPS Commonwealth
Police Service, Inc. and the Law Office of Patrick Michael Rogers |
Commonwealth
v. Molina (2003)
Present:
Indictment found and returned in the Superior Court Department on
A pretrial motion to suppress evidence was heard by Elizabeth B. Donovan, J.,
and the case was tried before her.
After review by the
Rami M. Vanegas, Assistant
District Attorney, for the Commonwealth.
Dana Alan Curhan (Lori A. Benavides with him) for the
defendant.
A jury in the Superior Court found the
defendant guilty of three counts of assault with intent to commit rape and
rape. In an unpublished memorandum and order pursuant to its rule
Facts. We will summarize the facts as found by the
judge in her denial of the defendant's motion to suppress. Officer Roy Gows of the
When the officers arrived at the apartment, Officer Gows
knocked on the front door. People had begun to gather outside the house when
the defendant opened the door. The defendant fit the physical description
provided by the complainant, and when asked, identified himself as Molina.
Detective Nee and Officer Gows proceeded to step into
the living room, which is accessible directly from the front door, and
Detective Nee handcuffed the defendant while stating that he was under arrest.
At one point, a young woman who also lived in the apartment became very angry
and began screaming at the officers. Concerned that she might have access to his
firearm, Detective Nee moved the defendant ten feet through an adjacent doorway
into the kitchen, while instructing Officer Gows to
deal with the young woman.
Sergeant McLean went to the kitchen and joined Detective Nee, as the latter
officer was giving the defendant Miranda warnings. The defendant was informed
that the complainant had made an allegation of rape, and when asked, responded
that he had not had sexual intercourse with her.[1]
While in the kitchen, the officers noticed a two-foot long knife on the
counter, corroborating the complainant's statement that a large knife had been
used. The officers then advised the defendant that he would be spending the
night at the station, and asked if he wanted to retrieve a sweater to wear over
his "muscle shirt." The defendant agreed, and led the officers to his
third-floor bedroom. While in the bedroom, the officers saw a brown knife
sheath, also described by the complainant. The defendant told the officers the
knife was somewhere in the room, but the officers did not search for it. The
defendant was again given the Miranda warnings during the booking process at
the police station. Later, the defendant was overheard saying that he had a
past relationship with the complainant, but did not rape her.
Discussion. The defendant claims that the warrantless arrest in his apartment was without probable
cause and exigent circumstances. As a result, he moved to suppress his
statements made in the apartment,[2] as
well as the observations made by the officers of the knife in the kitchen and
the sheath in the bedroom. When evaluating the denial of a motion to suppress,
we accept the judge's subsidiary findings of fact absent clear error.
In this situation, the defendant concedes that the officers had probable cause
to arrest him by virtue of the complainant's statement. The police, however,
decided to effectuate the arrest inside the defendant's home without first
securing a warrant. "The right of police officers to enter into a home,
for whatever purpose, represents a serious governmental intrusion into one's
privacy." Commonwealth v. Marquez, 434
When proffering justification based on exigent circumstances, the burden is on
the Commonwealth to show that "it was impracticable for the police to
obtain a warrant, and the standards as to exigency are strict." Commonwealth v. Forde, supra at 800,
citing McDonald v.
Applying the enumerated factors to this situation, a finding of exigent
circumstances is not warranted. Implicit in the test itself
is that police officers cannot deliberately create the exigency that leads to
the warrantless arrest. Considered in isolation, the
circumstances at the defendant's apartment may have entitled the police to
enter and effectuate the warrantless arrest.[4] There was no justification, however, for
the officers to go to the defendant's apartment with the purpose of arresting
him without a warrant.
While some of the factors of the exigency test have been met,[5]
others have not. The alleged assault occurred the night before the complaint
was taken by Officer Gows. Officer Gows returned to the station after receiving the complaint
in order to make a report, and subsequently discussed the case with Detective
Nee and Sergeant McLean before proceeding to the defendant's apartment. It was
certainly foreseeable that the officers would need to enter the apartment to
effectuate the arrest; however, no arrest warrant was secured. There is no
evidence in the record explaining why the officers neglected to secure a
warrant. The Commonwealth offers no evidence supporting any risk of flight, and
to the extent that was a concern, nothing prevented the placement of an officer
at the premises while a warrant was secured. Additionally, there was no concern
regarding destruction of evidence, or any evidence that delay would subject the
officers to physical harm.
This was not a situation where officers were in hot pursuit of a fleeing
suspect in the immediate aftermath of a crime. While the officers did have a
person accused of a heinous act, it is the Commonwealth's burden to demonstrate
the reasons that the officers failed to secure a warrant. The
Fourth Amendment to the
Because the defendant's warrantless arrest in his
apartment was unlawful, the police had no legal justification for being inside
his apartment at any time. Once inside, any observations by the officers of
items in that apartment were made from an unlawful vantage point, and may not
be admitted into evidence. See Wong Sun v.
We must now determine whether the erroneous admission of these statements and
observations made during the defendant's unlawful arrest was harmless beyond a
reasonable doubt.
Examining the nature of the evidence that should have been suppressed, it
cannot be said that the error to admit the evidence was harmless beyond a
reasonable doubt.[6]
In sum, because the defendant was unlawfully arrested at his home, any
statements or observations made by law enforcement officers must be suppressed
as fruit of the poisonous tree. Admitting the officers' observation of the
knife in the kitchen and sheath in the bedroom, as well as the statements made
by the defendant while in his house, was error that was not harmless beyond a
reasonable doubt. Therefore, the judgments are reversed, the verdicts are set
aside, and the case remanded to the Superior Court for a new trial.
So ordered.
FOOTNOTES:
[1] At the motion to suppress hearing, the record
indicates Detective Nee testified that when he asked the defendant whether he
had had sexual intercourse with the complainant, the defendant said, "Yes."
This is contrary to the motion judge's finding of fact, the
[2] The defendant also argues that statements made to
police at the station should be suppressed as well, because his waiver was not
voluntary, knowing, and intelligent. We decline to address this claim because
we reverse on other grounds.
[3] For the first time on appeal, the Commonwealth argues
that the officers had the implied consent of the complainant (who had resided
at the apartment for six weeks) to enter the defendant's apartment. The judge
made no findings of fact as to this issue, and it was not raised below. While
we may affirm the judge's ruling on an alternate ground, we decline to do so
because the argument is factually deficient and unpersuasive.
[4] Because the very entry itself was unlawful, we
need not address the propriety of the subsequent march from room to room as it
pertains to admissibility of observations and statements.
[5] The Commonwealth has demonstrated that there was
probable cause that a felony had been committed, the defendant was in the
dwelling, and the crime was one of violence with a dangerous weapon. These
factors should have facilitated the procuring of an arrest warrant.
[6] Because the admission of some statements and
observations was error, and as such we are reversing the verdicts, we need not
address the defendant's other arguments.
[7] See note 1, supra.