NV citizen’s arrest requires crime occur in arrestor’s presence

Defendant entered making a citizen’s arrest for a crime that did not occur in his presence. His conviction is affirmed because that’s a statutory requirement. The knock-and-announce requirement in the statute also serves an important purpose in citizen’s arrest. Ser v. State, 2025 Nev. LEXIS 65 (Nov. 20, 2025):

Of particular concern is the statute in play here, NRS 171.138, which allows a private person to “break open a door or window of the house, structure or other place of concealment in which the person to be arrested is… after having demanded admittance and explained the purpose for which admittance is desired.” While a police officer’s ability to enter a private dwelling is circumscribed by the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution and Article 1, Section 18 of the Nevada Constitution, neither of those constitutional provisions apply to private citizens. Radkus v. State, 90 Nev. 406, 408, 528 P.2d 697, 698 (1974) (collecting cases). Allowing private, untrained individuals to break into homes at any hour of the day or night presents serious safety concerns. And these concerns are not ameliorated by the knock-and-announce requirement. If a person bearing no insignia of authority breaks into a person’s home, we are unconvinced that announcing the intention to make a citizen’s arrest reduces the risk of violence, which is among the main purposes of knock-and-announce provisions. Hudson v. Michigan, 547 U.S. 586, 594 (2006). NRS 171.138 thus invites tragic situations in which a homeowner kills or injures a would-be citizen’s arrestor who is acting as the law presently allows. Limiting the breadth of this statute, however, falls to the Nevada Legislature.

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