DC: Entry on a domestic dispute unjustified by exigency; everybody involved was outside the house

The entry into defendant’s house was not supported by exigency. The police interviewed the participants in a domestic dispute outside, and there was no reason at all to believe that there was someone in the house in need of aid. The government’s other grounds for justification of the entry weren’t raised below. The affirmance on any other ground rule doesn’t apply here. “We conclude that considerations of procedural fairness preclude affirmance based on the United States’s forbidden-fruit argument.” Evans v. United States, 2015 D.C. App. LEXIS 363 (August 6, 2015).

The CI doesn’t have to be shown to be reliable if there are other facts that support probable cause. United States v. Martin, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 103765 (N.D.Ga. June 29, 2015).

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