N.D.Ohio: Gunfire from a house is exigency

Gunfire from inside a house and the obvious presence of weapons being used was exigency for an entry into the premises. United States v. Hall, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 99130 (N.D. Ohio September 21, 2010):

The government contends that the entry into the residence and the subsequent search is justified by the exigent circumstances. The Court agrees.

In this case, a call to the police dispatcher reported gunfire, the possible presence of an assault weapon, and the entry of the persons engaged in the shooting into the house in question. Ms. Hall, who answered the door, confirmed to the officers her understanding that they were present at her door because of shots fired. The police officers testified at the suppression hearing that the purpose of the search was to secure the armed suspects. The officers were concerned about the presence inside the house of individuals with guns who had just been firing the guns, the safety of the residents of the house, and their own safety as the police could not definitively determine whether the residents were under orders from the suspects to act calm, whether the residents were even aware of intruders in the house, or whether more shots might be fired by the suspects in the house. Even after securing the first floor, the officers testified that not all the suspects reported had been accounted for, and movement on the second floor was being confirmed while the officers were in the house securing the first floor. This information supported a continuing concern as to whether suspects with guns remained at large on the second floor, and for the safety of the residents and their own safety from suspects who had already demonstrated a propensity for discharging their weapons.

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