NY2: Search of house for weapon after protective sweep was unreasonable

Defendant was reported to have assaulted people outside his house with a small bat and a brandishing a firearm. Police arrived, and he ran inside. Police kicked the door in, secured him, cleared the house [a protective sweep] putting the other occupants together in a back room. Then they searched for the gun. The search for the gun was unreasonable and beyond the purpose of the entry. Also, defendant’s motion papers said he sought to suppress “the physical evidence,” but the hearing focused on the gun, not the bat. The gun should have been suppressed. [Likely the bat, too, if it hadn’t been waived, but the gun was a more serious crime.] People v. Williams, 2017 NY Slip Op 00329, 2017 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 331 (2d Dept. Jan. 18, 2017).

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