MO: Officers could not enter garage for DUI arrest; hot pursuit fails

Police on DUI patrol saw defendant cross the centerline twice in a mile. They followed. He pulled into his driveway then garage and the door was closing. Officers slipped under the door to arrest him. They did not have probable cause for DUI yet, and the entry was an entry into the home in violation of Payton. This was not hot pursuit. State v. Foster, 392 S.W.3d 576 (Mo. App. 2013):

Given a surprising paucity of Missouri decisions, the parties primarily cite other state’s cases. Having read those and many more, we find most helpful, despite its different facts, the case of State v. Wren, 768 P.2d 1351 (Idaho App. 1989). Responding to a neighborhood complaint, officers told Wren, who was in his yard, to “quiet down” or be cited for peace disturbance. Wren replied abusively and went into his house. The officers pushed their way through the door, subdued Wren by force, arrested him inside his home, and found marijuana in his pocket. In reviewing Wren’s unsuccessful motion to suppress, the appellate court addressed

a narrow but important constitutional question. May police officers, in whose presence a nonviolent misdemeanor has occurred, pursue the alleged offender into his home and seize him there without an arrest warrant? We hold that they may not unless (a) the pursuit is triggered by flight from a lawful arrest outside the home, or (b) exigent circumstances, other than the pursuit itself, make it necessary to enter the home without a warrant.

Id. at 1352.

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