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If they cannot show that a 911 call was made, then there might be problems.Thats the thing no one there called they cnt produce 911 tape.
It could be very relevant. If they utilized a ruse (i.e. a lie) to gain consent, then the consent can be tossed. However, since the limitations of a ruse might be established by state and federal circuit case law, it might be an acceptable ruse to some degree in the OP's state- it would not be in CA. At least one federal case held that lying about a warrant was sufficient to effectively deny someone the right to consent to a search, and that case has been cited in CA and 9th Circuit rulings on similar ruses (Bumper (1968) 391 U.S. 543.). VA may allow such ruses ... and the defense will likely make the appropriate motion to dismiss if a ruse was utilized in order to gain consent or force entry.911 is not very relevant here. Regardless of the reason they came to the house it sounds as if consent was given for them to enter and check on everyone.
If responding officers were bluffing about a 911 call, they would have to be true idiots as that could easily have been traced, and such a ruse would tend to invalidate any consent or probable cause to make entry in the first place.
At least one federal case held that lying about a warrant was sufficient to effectively deny someone the right to consent to a search, and that case has been cited in CA and 9th Circuit rulings on similar ruses (Bumper (1968) 391 U.S. 543.).
Knock and talk, sure. LYING (a ruse) about why you are there and using that reason to gain consent or fake probable cause, no. Not in CA, anyway.I believe this sort of knock and talk ruse has repeatedly been upheld by courts as legal. The officers in this case did well to stop and get a warrant before proceeding with the marijuana search.
The issue of a ruse appears to be state specific. There is ample CA case law and some 9th circuit case law on the issue for us out here, but not all that much on point by the USSC.Lying about having a warrant is very different. The ruse in this case does not go to that extreme in which the homeowner would not have a right to refuse.
Yep. When a cellular 911 call gets transferred from CHP it still is referred to as a 911 call, even though it would come into our dispatch center on another line - sometimes and unrecorded line.And yes you are right, we are speculating. There very well may have been a legit 911 call, even if it was a hangup/malfunction as so many are.
And that would not be a ruse. If I received a call of a disturbance, and I asked to check on the wellbeing of the occupants, that would not be deceptive, it would be honest. If I dod NOT receive such a call, THEN it would be a ruse and very likely unlawful.A knock and talk ruse can still be valid in CA. It just depends greatly on how voluntary the consent is in regard to the ruse. A ruse such as this asking for consent to check the safetyof occupants would not be illegal.
Agreed.Probable cause regarding the marijuana developed once inside the home. Permission to continue to search was denied and a search warrant obtained. I believe those circumstances would hold up in CA.
Had the officers continued to search for marijuana based only upon the consent gained by their ruse to check the welfare of the occupants then there would be problems.
If there was no call (911 or otherwise) and the responding officers characterized their presence and reason to make entry as being based upon said call (a knowing lie), then there would almost certainly be a HUGE problem.There is nothing that comes to mind that indicates this scenario would not be valid anywhere. Surely the laws are still evolving on this topic.
If there was no call (911 or otherwise) and the responding officers characterized their presence and reason to make entry as being based upon said call (a knowing lie), then there would almost certainly be a HUGE problem.
You may enter premises to make a warrantless arrest if a valid consent is obtained. (Escudero (1979) 23 Cal.3d 800; Wilkins (1993) 14 Cal.App.4th 761, 772-773.) However, a consent may be invalid for several reasons. For example, consent may be "coerced" (involuntary) if you obtain it through exerting your authority (e.g., pulling a gun, forcing your way in, or telling the suspect he has no choice) or by "tricking" the suspect by misrepresenting your true purpose.
A consent will be considered "coerced" (involuntary) if you lie about your true purpose for entering.
Example: You simply ask for and receive permission to "come in." This should be a valid consent since you have not stated any purpose at all, i.e., you haven't misrepresented your purpose. (Timothy E. (1979) 99 Cal.App.3d 349.)
Example: You ask for permission to enter "to talk to" the suspect. Inside, you immediately arrest the suspect. This will be considered a bad entry because of your misrepresentation of purpose. You said your purpose was to "talk," i.e., investigate further, whereas your true purpose was to arrest. (Kenner (1977) 73 Cal.App.3d 65; Johnny V. (1978) 85 Cal.App.3d 120.)
However, you must remember that no matter which of these justifications explains your presence in the building, the doctrine of "plain view" does not expand that justification. (Meyers (1979) 25 Cal.3d 67; Williams (1988) 198 Cal.App.3d 873.) Also, if you are lawfully inside the premises because of "consent," that consent must be valid. If the consent to enter or search was given in response to your assertion of authority (coercion) or because you misrepresented your purpose (trick or ruse), it is invalid, and seeing something in plain view inside does not remedy the situation.
You may use a false name or employ some other trick or ruse to obtain consent to enter if you already have a judicially authorized right to enter, e.g., a search warrant. (McCarter (1981) 117 Cal.App.3d 894; Michaud (9th Cir. 2001) 268 F.3d 728, 733.)
If you obtain consent to enter by "trick, ruse or subterfuge," the consent will be considered involuntary, at least if you misrepresent your authority or purpose.
(1) Misrepresenting Your Authority
If you falsely state that you have a warrant when you do not, any consent you obtain will be invalid. "When a law enforcement officer claims authority to search a home under warrant, he announces in effect that the occupant has no right to resist the search." (Bumper (1968) 391 U.S. 543.) Such statements, when untrue, will render consent involuntary and result in the suppression of evidence discovered. (Lane (1969) 271 Cal.App.2d 821.)
(2) Misrepresenting Your Purpose
If you tell the consenter that you want to enter for "X" purpose when your true purpose is to "search" (e.g., look for narcotics, stolen property, etc.), any consent you obtain will be ruled involuntary.
Example: Undercover officers set up surveillance in an unoccupied apartment next door to a suspected dope dealer. One officer went to the suspect's door, knocked, and asked if he could come in to make a phone call. Once inside, the officer made the phone call, but also observed narcotics and elicited incriminating remarks from the suspect which were then used to obtain a search warrant. The court suppressed the evidence because the consent to enter was involuntary. The officer had misrepresented his purpose as being to use the phone, whereas his true purpose was to look for narcotics. (Lathrop (1979) 99 Cal.App.3d 967.)
Example: A refrigerator repairman observed marijuana in a home and phoned the police. An undercover officer went out to the house, knocked, and told the suspect that he wished to talk to the repairman. Inside, the officer confirmed the repairman's observations and then obtained a search warrant. The evidence was suppressed. The officer had misrepresented the real purpose behind his request to come inside. (Mesaris (1970) 14 Cal.App.3d 71.)
Example: An officer received an anonymous letter that DeCaro had submitted a false insurance claim. The officer asked an insurance investigator to enter DeCaro's home under the guise of being a potential home buyer (DeCaro's home was listed for sale). While looking around the home with the real estate agent, the investigator saw stereo components and other equipment which DeCaro had falsely reported as stolen. A search warrant was obtained and much property was seized. It was all suppressed, however, because the investigator (who was the officer's agent) had misrepresented his purpose as being to possibly purchase the house, while his real purpose was to look for certain crime-related evidence. (DeCaro (1981) 123 Cal.App.3d 454.)
Note: If the real estate agent had been holding a true "open house" for the general public, the court would probably have reached the opposite result.
But, in this case, the officers appear to have gained entry based upon an allegation of an emergency call for service involving some sort of a disturbance or domestic, and it was not until they had already made entry that they smelled the marijuana.According to the Cherry v Commonwealth, it is irrelevant why he officers knocked on he door. What is relevant is they smelled weed and got a warrant.
http://caselaw.findlaw.com/va-court-of-appeals/1175447.html