IN: Injured dog not exigency for warrantless entry into home

Police and animal control officers responded to dogs fighting on the street, and one was bloody and apparently injured and ran into a house through an open sliding glass door. The animal control officer corralled three dogs and requested the officer go retrieve the fourth. The officer knocked and got no answer at the front door or the sliding glass door. He entered and stumbled upon a grow operation. The entry into the house was not justified by exigent circumstances. Carpenter v. State, 2014 Ind. LEXIS 835 (October 21, 2014).

Police responded to a call that a man at a house had pointed a gun at a woman. Police arrived, and defendant got up from the porch of the house and placed a handgun inside the door, out of sight. It was reasonable for the officers under the exigent circumstances exception to open the door and retrieve the gun because the officers didn’t know who was inside. Harris v. State, 2014 Ind. App. LEXIS 506 (October 21, 2014).

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