W.D. Mo.: Hot pursuit justified entry to arrest

Hot pursuit into a house to make an arrest was reasonable. United States v. Ginn, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 94404 (W.D. Mo. August 24, 2010)*:

In this case, under the particular facts presented, the Court concludes that the law enforcement officers did reasonably perceive exigent circumstances at the time they made the decision to enter the residence at 1519 Charles. At time the officers made that decision, they had reason to believe:

• When Ginn was approached by law enforcement officers regarding his traffic offence, he refused to heed their orders to stop and ran off into a residence, locking the door, and thereafter forcibly attempting to keep the officers from opening the door.

• Prior to entering the residence (which the officers did not know was Ginn’s residence), Ginn was seen displaying what appeared to one officer to be a handgun.

Based on this evidence, an objectively reasonable officer on the scene could have believed that there was an exigency and that a suspect was attempting to escape and/or there was an immediate danger to innocent third persons. These circumstances justified all of the officers’ actions up to and including entry of the residence to arrest Ginn.

A specific date from the CI was not provided to the officer and put into the affidavit for the search warrant, but reading the affidavit as whole, the affidavit was not stale. The CI contacted the officer just before the affidavit was prepared, and it sounded timely reading it as a whole. United States v. Downs, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 94504 (E.D. N.C. September 10, 2010).*

This entry was posted in Uncategorized. Bookmark the permalink.

Comments are closed.