D.Kan.: Having a 15-year-old runaway in a motel room falsely implying a marital relationship is exigency for entry

Defendant was accused of staying in a motel with a 15-year-old runaway apparently listed with the hotel as his likely wife, and the facts presented to the officers, as in other courts in similar cases, provided exigent circumstances. Probable cause is still required for an arrest on entry, and it was present here. United States v. Carmona, 2018 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 158515 (D. Kan. Sep. 18, 2018):

Some things cannot be undone. So it is with the sexual assault or exploitation of a child, and the risk of that irreversible harm is precisely the type of danger that can constitute exigent circumstances. See Gilliam, 842 F.3d at 804 (citing numerous cases finding exigent circumstances warranted entry into premises to avoid risk of injury to minor held therein). The officers’ entry into the motel room to protect L.M. from serious harm under these circumstances was objectively reasonable. The manner and scope of the search were also reasonable. The officers did not break open the door, but knocked just before opening it with a key card. Upon doing so, they did not enter the room but ordered Defendant out on the balcony, where they handcuffed him. They then removed L.M. from the room and took her a short distance away to verify her identity and ensure her safety, before conducting a sweep of the room to make sure no one else was inside. The court finds these actions were objectively reasonable and were properly limited in scope.

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