State v. McCall ( 2022 )


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  •                                                        138 Nev., Advance Opinion       1,4
    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEVADA
    THE STATE OF NEVADA,                                   No. 82640
    Appellant,
    vs.
    CHARLES WADE MCCALL,
    FiLED               --
    Respondent.                                                 SEP 22 2022
    EL
    CLE
    BY
    HIEF DEPUTY CLERK
    Appeal from a district court order granting a motion to suppress
    in a criminal prosecution. Eighth Judicial District Court, Clark County;
    Monica Trujillo, Judge.
    Affirmed in part, vacated in part, and remanded.
    Aaron D. Ford, Attorney General, Carson City; Steven B. Wolfson, District
    Attorney, Alexander Chen and Jonathan E. VanBoskerck, Chief Deputy
    District Attorneys, and Austin C. Beaumont, Deputy District Attorney,
    Clark County,
    for Appellant.
    Sanft Law and Michael W. Sanft, Las Vegas,
    for Respondent.
    BEFORE THE        SUPREME      COURT, HARDESTY,             STIGLICH, and
    HERNDON, JJ.
    OPINION
    By the Court, STIGLICH, J.:
    It is axiomatic that all persons shall be free from unreasonable,
    warrantless search and seizure. The United States Supreme Court has
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    carved out an exception to this general rule, however, permitting officers to
    conduct warrantless protective sweeps of areas for which they can
    articulate—and only when they can articulate—specific facts that lead them
    to believe the area being swept harbors an individual posing a danger to
    those on scene. Here, the district court granted a motion to suppress the
    evidence found as a result of and during a protective sweep, determining
    that the officers did not have an appropriate basis for the protective sweep
    and that the protective sweep was per se unconstitutional because it was
    not preceded by an arrest.
    While we hold that a protective sweep does not require a prior
    arrest, we conclude that the district court correctly concluded that the
    search performed here was not a lawful protective sweep because it was not
    based on articulable facts supporting a reasonable belief that the premises
    harbored a dangerous individual. The district court's order, however, did
    not indicate the specific evidence that was improperly seized as a result of
    the protective sweep or as its fruit. Accordingly, we affirm in part, vacate
    in part, and remand for the district court to clarify the evidence that falls
    within the purview of the suppression order and which items were
    permissibly seized by law enforcement.
    BACKGROUND
    Colette Winn resided in a home owned by respondent Charles
    Wade McCall. Winn was on probation and subject to a search clause that
    allowed officers to search her living quarters.1   While McCall was an ex-
    felon, he was not on probation or parole.
    1The  search clause reads as follows: "You shall submit your person,
    place of residence, vehicle or areas under your control to search including
    electronic surveillance or monitoring of your location, at any time, with or
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    Winn's probation officer received an anonymous letter that
    claimed Winn was violating her probation. The letter focused primarily on
    Winn, alleging that she was "engaged in criminal activity with all ex felons,"
    and warned that "[w]e[a]pons might be found, so please be careful." The
    letter also contended that Winn was "slinging drugs out of the far back
    bedroom." The letter only tangentially referred to McCall as a "convicted
    felon" but did not otherwise allege that McCall was engaged in any illegal
    activity or was dangerous. As a result of the anonymous letter, Winn was
    arrested at the probation office and interviewed. Winn told the officers that
    she lived with two other roommates, McCall and Mahatuhi Santos.2            The
    officers researched McCall and learned he was an ex-felon and not subject
    to supervision. A total of eight officers, with Winn in tow, headed to Winn's
    home to search her place of residence pursuant to the search clause of the
    probation agreement.
    This   search   devolved   into   a   raid.   For   purposes    of
    "containment," three officers flanked the sides and rear of the home.
    Meanwhile, four other officers in tactical gear banged on the door, let
    themselves into the home using a key code provided by Winn, and made
    entry with their guns drawn. Upon entry, they encountered both McCall,
    who had come out of his bedroom in the far back of the home with his dog,
    and Santos. The officers instructed McCall to reenter his bedroom and place
    his dog in the bathroom located therein.       Even though McCall readily
    without a search warrant or warrant of arrest, for evidence of a crime or
    violation of probation by the Division of Parole and Probation or its agent."
    2The  officers did not ask Winn about the letter's contents, and the
    record does not indicate that Winn corroborated any of the letter's
    allegations beyond that she did not live alone.
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    complied with the officers' instruction, three officers followed McCall into
    his bedroom without his consent to sweep the room. Once inside McCall's
    room, one of the officers observed shotgun shells on McCall's dresser and
    detained McCall because they believed they would find guns as well. The
    officers read McCall his Miranda rights, after which McCall admitted to
    having firearms in the bedroom and identified them to the officers. The
    officers later admitted that they entered the home with the intention to
    search every room and that they conduct sweeps of the entirety of every
    home they enter as a matter of course even if they believe no one is present.
    The officers contacted the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police
    Department, which obtained a search warrant to further search the house
    and McCall's vehicle. In McCall's bedroom and vehicle, officers found and
    seized three firearms, a credit card embosser, blank credit card stock, and
    several other items. McCall was charged with one count of establishing or
    possessing a financial forgery laboratory, three counts of ownership or
    possession of a firearm by a prohibited person, and five counts of possession
    of document or personal identifying information.
    McCall filed a motion to suppress, arguing that the protective
    sweep violated the Fourth Amendment and that the derivative evidence
    seized was fruit of the poisonous tree. The State opposed, and the district
    court held an evidentiary hearing. At the hearing, the officers admitted
    that they went into the home with the intention of conducting a protective
    sweep of every room and that they would not have gone directly to Winn's
    room without conducting a full protective sweep of the house. One officer
    explained that "whenever we go into a residence, we clear the residence, we
    make sure that there are no other people there every time. . . . We do that
    every time."
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    The district court determined that "Where was no lawful basis
    for the protective sweep" for two reasons.      First, there was no arrest
    preceding the protective sweep. Second, the officers "failed to testify to a
    reasonable belief based on specific and articulable facts that the area to be
    swept harbored an individual posing a danger to those on the scene." The
    district court concluded that there were no exigent circumstances
    warranting the protective sweep and thus suppressed the items seized
    during the sweep and those seized thereafter pursuant to the search
    warrant as fruit of the poisonous tree. The State appeals.
    DISCUSSION
    A protective sweep does not require a prior arrest
    The district court determined that a protective sweep requires
    a prior arrest.   The State challenges this conclusion, arguing that law
    enforcement may conduct a protective sweep before an arrest and that the
    "reasonableness balancing required by the Fourth Amendment weighs
    towards allowing probation officers to conduct protective sweeps in non-
    arrest scenarios." We review this constitutional issue de novo. State v.
    Lloyd, 
    129 Nev. 739
    , 743, 
    312 P.3d 467
    , 469 (2013) ("A district court's legal
    conclusion regarding the constitutionality of a challenged search receives
    de novo review.").
    The      Fourth   Amendment    protects   against   unreasonable
    searches and seizures. U.S. Const. amend. IV; Nev. Const. art. 1, § 18; see
    also Lloyd, 129 Nev. at 743, 312 P.3d at 469. Warrantless searches are
    generally deemed unreasonable, with a few well-established exceptions.
    Lloyd, 129 Nev. at 743, 312 P.3d at 469. One of these exceptions is a
    protective sweep.     See Maryland v. Buie, 
    494 U.S. 325
    , 327 (1990).      A
    protective sweep is generally described as "a quick and limited search of
    premises, incident to an arrest and conducted to protect the safety of police
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    officers or others." 
    Id.
     Such a sweep is permissible under the Fourth
    Amendment if the officer held "a reasonable belief based on specific and
    articulable facts which, taken together with the rational inferences from
    those facts, reasonably warranted the officer in believing that the area
    swept harbored an individual posing a danger to the officer or others." 
    Id.
    (alteration, citation, and internal quotation marks omitted). The search is
    a cursory inspection of places where a person may be found and "lasts no
    longer than is necessary to dispel the reasonable suspicion of danger." 
    Id. at 335-36
    .
    The United States Supreme Court has not addressed whether
    a protective sweep requires a prior arrest. See Leslie A. O'Brien, Note,
    Finding a Reasonable Approach to the Extension of the Protective Sweep
    Doctrine in Non-Arrest Situations, 
    82 N.Y.U. L. Rev. 1139
    , 1140-41 (2007)
    (noting that the Suprerne Court has yet to address this issue). So too did
    this court remain silent on this issue in Hayes v. State, 
    106 Nev. 543
    , 
    797 P.2d 962
     (1990), overruled on other grounds by Ryan v. Eighth Judicial Dist.
    Court, 
    123 Nev. 419
    , 
    168 P.3d 703
     (2007), the one case in which this court
    has applied Buie.3
    3Likewise, when this court addressed protective sweeps before Buie,
    it did not settle whether a prior arrest was required. When this court
    considered a protective sweep in Koza v. State, the search was conducted
    after appellant had been arrested, and the court upheld the
    constitutionality of a protective sweep where the circumstances presented
    reasonable grounds by which officers could conclude that a search was
    necessary to prevent an urgent risk to their or others' lives. 
    100 Nev. 245
    ,
    250, 252-53, 
    681 P.2d 44
    , 46, 48-49 (1984) (interpreting the protective sweep
    under the emergency exception to the Fourth Amendment warrant
    requirement). Koza did not consider whether the search would be
    permissible absent a prior arrest. And in Gagliano v. State, the court held
    a warrantless protective sweep unconstitutional where the circumstances
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    Other courts that have considered this issue have largely, but
    not uniformly, determined that a protective sweep does not require a prior
    arrest. The New Jersey Supreme Court held that an arrest is not required
    to conduct a protective sweep where (1) the officers are lawfully on the
    premises, (2) the officers "have a reasonable articulable suspicion that the
    area to be swept harbors an individual posing a danger," (3) the sweep is
    conducted quickly, and (4) it is restricted to areas in which the person(s)
    posing a danger could hide. State v. Davila, 
    999 A.2d 1116
    , 1119 (N.J. 2010).
    Further, "Mhe police cannot create the danger that becomes the basis for a
    protective sweep." 
    Id.
     Similarly, the United States Court of Appeals for the
    Eleventh Circuit approved of a protective sweep that occurred before an
    arrest where the officers had a reasonable belief that there was another
    individual present who could do them harm. United States v. Caraballo,
    
    595 F.3d 1214
    , 1224-25 (11th Cir. 2010). So too has the First Circuit held
    "that police who have lawfully entered a residence possess the same right
    to conduct a protective sweep whether an arrest warrant, a search warrant,
    or the existence of exigent circumstances prompts their entry." United
    States v. Martins, 
    413 F.3d 139
    , 150 (1st Cir. 2005), abrogated on other
    presented no basis to conclude that rooms of the apartment other than that
    permissibly searched contained anyone or thing threatening officer
    security. 
    97 Nev. 297
    , 298-99, 
    629 P.2d 781
    , 782-83 (1981). To the extent
    that Gagliano cites a United States Supreme Court decision considering
    searches incident to arrest to suggest that a protective sweep requires a
    prior arrest, see 
    id. at 298
    , 
    629 P.2d at 782
     (quoting Chimel v. California,
    
    395 U.S. 752
    , 762-63 (1969), overruled in part by Arizona v. Grant, 
    556 U.S. 332
     (2009)), Gagliano did not rely on arrest status, and the suggestion is
    thus dicta.
    We accordingly disavow Gagliano to the extent that it suggests a
    protective sweep requires a prior arrest.
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    grounds by Hill v. Walsh, 
    884 F.3d 16
     (1st Cir. 2018). The Second, Fifth,
    Sixth, and D.C. Circuits are in accord. See United States v. Miller, 
    430 F.3d 93
    , 99 (2d Cir. 2005); United States v. Gould, 
    364 F.3d 578
    , 586 (5th Cir.
    2004), abrogated on other grounds by Kentucky v. King, 
    563 U.S. 452
     (2011);
    United States v. Taylor, 
    248 F.3d 506
    , 513 (6th Cir. 2001); United States v.
    Patrick, 
    959 F.2d 991
    , 996-97 (D.C. Cir. 1992), abrogated on other grounds
    by United States v. Webb, 
    255 F.3d 890
     (D.C. Cir. 2001).
    The Tenth Circuit veered slightly off the path trod by the other
    circuits. In United States v. Torres-Castro, the Tenth Circuit concluded
    "that a protective sweep is only valid when performed incident to an arrest."
    
    470 F.3d 992
    , 997 (10th Cir. 2006). However, this difference may be only a
    matter of degrees, as the court noted that a protective sweep "may precede
    an arrest, and still be incident to that arrest, so long as the arrest follows
    quickly thereafter." 
    Id. at 998
    .4
    The Ninth Circuit's caselaw is inconsistent on this issue. See
    Mendez v. County of Los Angeles, 
    815 F.3d 1178
    , 1191 (9th Cir. 2016) (noting
    the intracircuit split), vacated, 581 U.S.     , 
    137 S. Ct. 1539
     (2017). In
    United States v. Garcia, the Ninth Circuit upheld a protective sweep
    conducted before the defendant's arrest. 
    997 F.2d 1273
    , 1282 (9th Cir.
    1993). Conversely, the Ninth Circuit determined in United States v. Reid
    that officers were not entitled to conduct a protective sweep where the
    defendant was not already under arrest. 
    226 F.3d 1020
    , 1027 (9th Cir.
    2000). However, it is unclear whether the lack of a prior arrest was the
    dispositive issue in Reid, because the government's lack of articulable facts
    4TheTenth Circuit noted that "quickly" might be satisfied when "the
    search and arrest were separated by times ranging from five to sixty
    minutes." 
    Id.
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    "that the apartment harbor[ed] an individual posing a danger" also
    prompted the Ninth Circuit's decision. 
    Id.
     (alteration in original) (internal
    quotation marks omitted).
    We agree with the majority approach, as it appropriately
    balances the rights of an individual to be free from an unreasonable search
    and the safety of the officers and other people on the scene. See Buie, 
    494 U.S. at 327
     (recognizing a concern for the officer's safety as well as that of
    other people on scene). Officers may be lawfully in an individual's home
    under nonarrest situations (for example, by consent) where they have
    articulable, legitimate safety concerns justifying a protective sweep. See
    Davila, 999 A.2d at 1118-19. Accordingly, we conclude that a protective
    sweep is permissible where there are articulable facts that would cause a
    reasonably prudent officer to believe that the area to be swept harbors an
    individual who poses a danger to those at the scene. We decline to adopt a
    per se rule requiring an arrest before a protective sweep.
    The district court correctly concluded that the protective sweep was unlawful
    The district court found that officers did not testify to a
    reasonable belief that the premises harbored a dangerous individual
    compelling a protective sweep and concluded that the search was
    accordingly unlawful. The State argues that articulable facts support the
    officers' decision to conduct a protective sweep of McCall's bedroom. McCall
    counters that no facts justified a protective sweep of his room and that the
    officers were limited to searching areas within Winn's control. We review
    the district court's factual findings for clear error and analyze the legal
    consequences of those findings de novo. State v. Beckman, 
    129 Nev. 481
    ,
    486, 
    305 P.3d 912
    , 916 (2013).
    As discussed above, before conducting a protective sweep, an
    officer needs articulable facts that would warrant a reasonably prudent
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    officer to believe that the area to be swept harbors an individual who poses
    a danger to those at the scene. See Buie, 
    494 U.S. at 327
    ; Hayes, 
    106 Nev. at 550
    , 
    797 P.2d at 966
    . In applying this test in Hayes, we noted that it was
    insufficient to simply point to a possibility that an individual could be there,
    because "[i]f any possibility of danger were sufficient to create a reasonable
    belief of a danger, the police would have carte blanche power to conduct
    sweep searches of citizens' homes incident to virtually any arrest for a
    felony." 
    106 Nev. at 551
    , 
    797 P.2d at 967
    . Otherwise, "by means of post-
    hoc rationalizations, the police could justify virtually any sweep search." 
    Id.
    Thus, we strongly disapproved of the police conducting protective sweeps as
    "standard operating procedure," calling it a "patently unconstitutional"
    practice. Id. at 552, 
    797 P.2d at 967
    .
    We conclude that the district court did not clearly err in finding
    that the officers did not testify as to a reasonable belief that the area to be
    swept harbored a dangerous individual and that the district court correctly
    held the search to be unlawful. Our disposition here rests on the officers'
    troubling admission that they conduct a protective sweep of an entire
    residence as a matter of course.         This search was conducted without
    considering whether the circumstances presented              articulable facts
    supporting a reasonable belief that the premises harbored a dangerous
    person.   Rather, the search was carried out regardless of what the
    circumstances presented.     The bare possibility that a dangerous person
    might be present and hiding in a given location does not justify a protective
    sweep. The search here demonstrates a practice of warrantless searches
    unbound by the guidelines stated in Buie, Hayes, and elsewhere indicating
    when such searches may be constitutional. This practice cannot continue.
    We conclude that the protective sweep was unconstitutional where the
    officers' testimony established that the search was not based on articulable
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    facts supporting a reasonable belief that the area harbored a dangerous
    individual. The search here paid no heed to what the articulable facts might
    have been.
    In light of the officers' admissions that they did not predicate
    the search on articulable indicia that a dangerous person was present, the
    State's arguments for conducting the sweep strike us as post-hoc
    rationalizations that cannot retroactively cure the unconstitutionality of the
    search.5 See Brumley v. Commonwealth, 
    413 S.W.3d 280
    , 287 (Ky. 2013)
    ("The absence of information cannot be an articulable basis for a protective
    sweep that requires information to justify it in the first place."); see also
    Hayes, 
    106 Nev. at 551
    , 
    797 P.2d at 967
     (disapproving of "post-hoc
    rationalizations"). The argument that the officers needed to engage in the
    sweep because they did not know if the room was safe has the inquiry
    backwards. A protective sweep is constitutionally permissible only where
    officers have a reasonable belief of danger, not when they are merely unsure
    if an area is safe. This limitation is critical to ensure that officers may not
    5The  State makes the following arguments: (1) the anonymous letter
    informed the officers that drugs were sold out of the far back bedroom
    (McCall's bedroom); (2) the letter informed them that there may be weapons
    in the house and warned them to be careful; (3) an officer believed Winn
    was attempting to alert residents in the house by telling the officers she did
    not remember her keypad code for the front door and by offering them two
    different codes; (4) during his surveillance before entering the residence, an
    officer saw an unidentified person coming and going from the residence and
    did not know, when entering the premises, whether this man was inside the
    house; (5) officers did not know how many people were inside the house or
    whether the house was safe inside; and (6) the officers engaged in rnerely a
    cursory search of the area and only to prevent danger to themselves. We
    need not resolve whether these bases might justify a protective sweep, as
    the officers' admissions here make evident that these are post-hoc
    rationalizations that cannot support a protective sweep.
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    conduct warrantless sweeps as a matter of course, but only where justified
    by particular, exigent circumstances. See Hayes, 
    106 Nev. at 551
    , 
    797 P.2d at 967
    .
    While we agree with the district court's order that the search
    was unconstitutional, we are concerned about its scope. The order opaquely
    mentions that "the evidence seized pursuant to the search warrant must
    also be suppressed" but does not specify which pieces of evidence were so
    seized. The parties at oral argument before this court were unable to clarify
    the scope of the suppression order as well. As a result, we vacate in part
    and remand for the district court to enter findings regarding the specific
    evidence that was obtained through the improper protective sweep or as its
    fruit and that which was obtained permissibly.          Cf. United States v.
    Finucan, 
    708 F.2d 838
    , 844-45 (1st Cir. 1983) (vacating blanket suppression
    order and remanding with instructions for the district court to specify which
    items should be suppressed as unlawfully seized and as tainted by the
    unlawful seizure).6
    CONCLUSION
    Protective sweeps are permissible to ensure officer safety, not
    as an end-run around obtaining a search warrant. In this opinion, we hold
    that a protective sweep does not require a prior arrest. We affirm the
    6McCall also argues that his possession of a shotgun shell was not a
    state crime and thus his arrest violated his Fourth Amendment rights.
    However, we decline to consider this issue in light of our decision and
    because the district court did not discuss this issue in its suppression order.
    See Davis v. State, 
    107 Nev. 600
    , 606, 
    817 P.2d 1169
    , 1173 (1991)
    (determining that this court need not consider a claim that was not
    addressed by the district court), overruled on other grounds by Means v.
    State, 
    120 Nev. 1001
    , 
    103 P.3d 25
     (2004).
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    district court's suppression order in part because it did not err in concluding
    that the warrantless protective sweep here violated McCall's Fourth
    Amendment rights. We vacate in part and remand, however, for the district
    court to clarify the scope of the suppression order.
    Al4C1.1—°                j.
    Stiglich
    We concur:
    /
    Hardesty
    Herndon
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