MA: Exigency for warrantless pursuit entry still applied 90 minutes after a murder

Warrantless police entry to arrest was with probable cause and exigent circumstances, although it was 90 minutes after a shooting. It was close enough to the shooting that the delay in getting a warrant could lead to flight or destruction of evidence or the safety of others could be at issue. The killing was cold blooded with the defendant taking a cab to a bar, shooting his victim, and then taking a cab home. Commonwealth v. Figueroa, 2014 Mass. LEXIS 387 (May 19, 2014):

In Tyree, 455 Mass. at 684, we rejected the proposition that “exigent circumstances always justify a warrantless entry and search in the aftermath of a crime involving a firearm where the police have reason to believe (i.e., probable cause) that an armed suspect is in a particular place, even in circumstances where it is not impracticable to obtain a warrant” (emphasis in original). Rather, even where there is probable cause, a warrantless entry is only justified by exigent circumstances where the police have reasonable grounds to believe that obtaining a warrant would be impracticable under the circumstances because the delay in doing so would pose a significant risk that the suspect may flee, evidence may be destroyed, or the safety of the police or others may be endangered. See id. at 685-692; Commonwealth v. Moran, 370 Mass. 10, 12, 345 N.E.2d 380 (1976). Although these risks need not all be present for there to be exigent circumstances, each was present here.

As to the risk of flight, approximately ninety minutes earlier, the shooter had walked into a restaurant without any mask or disguise, shot a patron, ran outside, hailed a taxicab, and told the driver to take him to 59 Salem Street. Consequently, there were reasonable grounds to believe that the shooter recognized that the police may come to that address looking for him once they located the taxicab driver who drove him there, and that the shooter would soon attempt to flee that address to elude arrest. Contrast Tyree, 455 Mass. at 687 (no evidence of risk of flight where armed robbers were masked and had no reason to believe victim recognized them or that anyone had followed them).

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