Leroy Leslie Kelly, Jr. v. Commonwealth ( 2005 )


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  •                                COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA
    Present: Judges Benton, Kelsey and McClanahan
    Argued at Richmond, Virginia
    LEROY LESLIE KELLY, JR.
    MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY
    v.     Record No. 2777-03-2                                    JUDGE D. ARTHUR KELSEY
    MARCH 8, 2005
    COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA
    FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF HENRICO COUNTY
    George F. Tidey, Judge
    Steven D. Goodwin (Gregory R. Sheldon; Goodwin, Sutton &
    DuVal, P.L.C., on brief), for appellant.
    Stephen R. McCullough, Assistant Attorney General (Jerry W.
    Kilgore, Attorney General, on brief), for appellee.
    Leroy Leslie Kelly, Jr. challenges his conviction for cocaine possession, claiming the police
    seized incriminating evidence from his home without a warrant. The officer seized the evidence,
    however, only after its discovery by a firefighter responding to an emergency medical distress at the
    home. Applying Jones v. Commonwealth, 
    29 Va. App. 363
    , 
    512 S.E.2d 165
     (1999), we hold that
    the trial court correctly denied the motion to suppress.
    I.
    On appeal from a denial of a suppression motion, we examine the evidence in the light
    most favorable to the Commonwealth, giving it the benefit of all reasonable inferences. Medley
    v. Commonwealth, 
    44 Va. App. 19
    , 24, 
    602 S.E.2d 411
    , 413 (2004) (en banc); Slayton v.
    Commonwealth, 
    41 Va. App. 101
    , 103, 
    582 S.E.2d 448
    , 449 (2003).
    *
    Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not designated for publication.
    Observing his son having what appeared to be a seizure, Leroy Kelly, Sr. placed a call
    requesting emergency medical assistance. Two teams of firefighters from the Henrico County
    Fire Department arrived at Kelly Sr.’s home. He escorted them to his son’s bedroom. His son
    appeared agitated and looked like he had been in a fight. He had a “quarter size red mark” on his
    forehead, “blood rings” around both lips, and a “wet spot” in the groin area of his pants. The
    small room was in disarray. A table had been knocked over, scattering various items across the
    floor. Kelly was “circling” the area of the room near a bureau dresser.
    One of the firefighters, Scott Henderlite, conducted a medical evaluation and concluded
    that “one of the possibilities that we came up with was a possible drug problem.” With that in
    mind, Henderlite “began looking for needles” to address those concerns and to ensure the
    “medical safety” of both Kelly and the firefighters on the scene. “We just kind of looked around
    for anything in our vicinity that we may come in contact with,” he explained. While looking for
    drug-related paraphernalia, Henderlite found a “glass tube” ⎯ later determined to be a “crack
    pipe” containing cocaine residue. It was found on the floor underneath the corner of Kelly’s bed.
    Henderlite picked up the tube to examine it and then placed it back on the floor. After that,
    Henderlite testified, the police officers were “called to the scene.”
    Henderlite remained with Kelly and the glass tube until the police officers arrived. As
    soon as they arrived, he alerted the officers to the glass tube found during the search for
    drug-related paraphernalia. Officer K.L. Motley placed Kelly under arrest for possession and
    conducted a search incident to arrest. In the immediate vicinity, Motley found the crack pipe
    underneath the bed. A photo taken by the officer shows a glass tube, with both ends broken off,
    covered internally with burn marks and a white residue.
    On top of the adjacent dresser, Motley found a tin can containing a rock of crack cocaine
    and a razor blade. Underneath the dresser, he found a second crack pipe along with items used
    -2-
    for cleaning out such pipes. In one of the drawers of the dresser, Motley discovered a .380
    caliber semi-automatic handgun and ammunition.
    The officers escorted Kelly to the hospital and later charged him with possession of
    cocaine in violation of Code § 18.2-250. At trial, Kelly moved to suppress all incriminating
    evidence given the absence of a warrant authorizing the police to enter his home or to search his
    bedroom. The trial court held that, under the circumstances of this case, the police officer “can
    be there” and that there “wasn’t anything wrong with the arrest.” The court denied the motion to
    suppress the drug-related evidence, but granted the motion as to the firearm. Going into the
    dresser drawers, the court reasoned, went beyond the officers’ search-incident-to-arrest authority.
    On the merits, the court found Kelly guilty of possession of cocaine.
    II.
    Though the ultimate question whether the officers violated the Fourth Amendment
    triggers de novo scrutiny, “we defer to the trial court’s findings of ‘historical fact’ and give ‘due
    weight to the inferences drawn from those facts by resident judges and local law enforcement
    officers.’” Slayton, 41 Va. App. at 105, 582 S.E.2d at 449-50 (citations omitted). To prevail on
    appeal, “the defendant must show that the trial court’s denial of his suppression motion, when
    the evidence is considered in the light most favorable to the prosecution, was reversible error.”
    Id. at 105, 582 S.E.2d at 450 (citation omitted); see also Barkley v. Commonwealth, 
    39 Va. App. 682
    , 690, 
    576 S.E.2d 234
    , 238 (2003).
    In this case, Kelly concedes that his father invited the firefighters into the home. This
    consent satisfies the Fourth Amendment, particularly given the perceived emergency situation.
    See generally 3 Wayne R. LaFave, Search & Seizure § 6.6(a), at 451-53 (4th ed. 2004). Kelly
    objects, however, to the entry of the police officers into the home and their later seizure of the
    drugs and related paraphernalia from his bedroom.
    -3-
    To begin with, we agree with Kelly that the evidence did not show his father invited the
    police into the home. The police officers were “called to the scene” after the firefighters found
    the crack pipe underneath the corner of Kelly’s bed. When the officers arrived, the firefighters
    alerted them to the crack pipe. It was then that Kelly was arrested and the remaining evidence
    discovered during a search incident to arrest.
    The question presented by this case is whether the police made an illegal, warrantless
    entry into Kelly’s home.1 We answered this question in Jones: “After a fireman has observed
    evidence in plain view, he may summon a police officer, who may enter the residence and seize
    the evidence without first obtaining a warrant.” Jones, 29 Va. App. at 370, 512 S.E.2d at 168
    (citations omitted); see also Commonwealth v. Thornton, 
    24 Va. App. 478
    , 481-82, 486, 
    483 S.E.2d 487
    , 488-89, 491 (1997) (finding seizure lawful where firefighter “stepped out of the
    apartment and asked the police officers to enter and secure” money and drugs found inside).
    Both the reasoning and holding of Jones squares with the majority rule, described by Professor
    LaFave this way:
    If firemen, conducting a lawful warrantless inspection come upon
    evidence of crime, they may then make a warrantless seizure of
    that evidence. In addition, they may ask for police assistance in
    this regard, and the police who enter in response to the request do
    not need a warrant for the entry or seizure. “Once the privacy of
    the residence has been lawfully invaded, it is senseless to require a
    warrant for others to enter and complete what those already on the
    scene would be justified in doing.”
    5 LaFave, supra § 10.4(c), at 179 (quoting from State v. Bell, 
    737 P.2d 254
    , 257-58 (Wash.
    1987)); see Jones, 29 Va. App. at 371, 512 S.E.2d at 168 (also citing Bell, 737 P.2d at 257-58).
    1
    In Jones, we faced a similar question “whether it was objectively reasonable for a police
    officer assisting at the scene of an apartment fire to make a warrantless, non-consensual entry of
    a specific apartment in response to a firefighter’s statement, ‘I have something I want to show
    you.’” Jones, 29 Va. App. at 366, 512 S.E.2d at 166.
    -4-
    This follow-in-the-footsteps principle accepts that “where a lawful intrusion has already
    occurred, and a seizure by an official has validly taken place as a result of that intrusion, the
    invasion of privacy is not increased by an additional officer entering the residence.” Jones, 29
    Va. App. at 370, 512 S.E.2d at 168 (citing United States v. Green, 
    474 F.2d 1385
    , 1390 (5th Cir.
    1973)).2 “A warrant is not required in these circumstances because the defendant no longer has a
    reasonable expectation of privacy for that area of the apartment where one official validly on the
    premises has made the lawful discovery, and another is merely preserving the incriminating
    evidence.” Id. at 371, 512 S.E.2d at 169. “The apparent conflict between the Constitution and
    common sense which the plain view doctrine has reconciled is the same misconception which we
    here seek to dispel.” Id. at 371, 512 S.E.2d at 168-69. “Almost every court that has considered
    this issue has held that a warrant is not necessary because the accused no longer enjoyed a
    reasonable expectation of privacy in the area where one officer is lawfully present.” Wengert v.
    Maryland, 
    771 A.2d 389
    , 399 n.7 (Md. 2001) (citing 16 cases, including Jones, 29 Va. App. at
    370, 512 S.E.2d at 168).3
    This doctrinal concession to “common sense,” Jones, 29 Va. App. at 371, 512 S.E.2d at
    168 (citation omitted), comes with two important limitations. First, police officers cannot make
    a warrantless entry simply because firefighters earlier did so. The officers can follow in the
    2
    This principle has been accepted by the great majority of courts. See, e.g., United
    States v. Brand, 
    556 F.2d 1312
    , 1317 (5th Cir. 1977); United States v. Green, 
    474 F.2d 1385
    ,
    1390 (5th Cir. 1973); Idaho v. Bower, 
    21 P.3d 491
    , 496 (Id. 2001); Wengert v. Maryland, 
    771 A.2d 389
    , 399 (Md. 2001); State v. Eady, 
    733 A.2d 112
    , 120 (Conn. 1999); Mazen v. Seidel, 
    940 P.2d 923
    , 927 (Ariz. 1997); Commonwealth v. Person, 
    560 A.2d 761
    , 766 (Pa. Super. 1989). Its
    reception has not been unanimous, however. See, e.g., United States v. Hoffman, 
    607 F.2d 280
    ,
    283-84 (9th Cir. 1979).
    3
    See also United States v. Jacobsen, 
    466 U.S. 109
    , 125 (1984) (holding that “since the
    property had already been lawfully detained, the ‘seizure’ could, at most, have only a de minimis
    impact on any protected property interest”); Illinois v. Andreas, 
    463 U.S. 765
    , 771 (1983) (“No
    protected privacy interest remains in contraband in a container once government officers
    lawfully have opened that container and identified its contents as illegal.”).
    -5-
    footsteps of the firefighters only if they, during the course of their duties, discover what appears
    to be (using probable cause certitude) illegal contraband. See Jones, 29 Va. App. at 369, 512
    S.E.2d at 168 (applying footsteps doctrine only when an “incriminating object comes into view
    during the performance of the fireman’s duty”).
    Second, because the police “step into the shoes” of the firefighters, 5 LaFave, supra at
    179 (citation omitted), the officers are limited to only those areas the firefighters could go and
    only those times the firefighters could go there. If the officers breach these boundaries, they
    must have an independent justification for the additional intrusion ⎯ one not merely derivative
    of the firefighters. Id. Otherwise, the officers must limit themselves to the “footsteps” of the
    firefighters and cannot “exceed the scope of the firefighters’ earlier intrusion.” Jones, 29
    Va. App. at 371-72, 512 S.E.2d at 169 (citation omitted); see also Wengert, 771 A.2d at 399 n.7
    (recognizing that “the later officials must confine their intrusion to the scope of the original
    invasion unless a warrant or one of the exceptions to the warrant requirement justifies a more
    wide ranging search”).4
    Here, Kelly’s father thought his son might be having a seizure and placed an emergency
    call requesting help. Local firefighters were the first responders. When they arrived, they
    4
    Most of the cases applying the footsteps doctrine involve emergency first responders
    like firemen, Jones, 29 Va. App. at 370, 512 S.E.2d at 168; Bell, 737 P.2d at 257-58, or other
    types of “emergency medical personnel,” Bower, 21 P.3d at 494. We do not address whether, if
    at all, the doctrine applies outside this context.
    We also have no occasion in this case to reconsider Jones or to attempt to limit it to
    police officers who can justify their warrantless entry on emergency grounds. Neither at trial, in
    his appellate brief, nor at oral argument on appeal did Kelly challenge Jones or our interpretation
    of it. Nor did Kelly, either on brief or at oral argument, attempt to distinguish it in the manner
    asserted by the dissent. To be sure, Kelly’s counsel conceded at oral argument that Jones would
    permit a police officer to make a warrantless entry if a firefighter summoned him after finding
    what he had probable cause to believe was contraband. “All the fireman has to say,” counsel
    argued, “is that I believed it was probably contraband.” For these reasons, Rule 5A:18, Rule
    5A:20(e), and the interpanel accord doctrine together preclude us from considering any challenge
    to Jones.
    -6-
    entered the home and found a battered young man circling his disheveled bedroom. After
    assessing his medical condition, the firefighters concluded a “possible drug problem” explained
    Kelly’s symptoms. For his safety and their own, the firefighters searched the immediate area for
    needles or other drug paraphernalia that might confirm or dispel their suspicions. While doing
    so, they found what appeared to be a crack pipe. One of the firefighters picked up the pipe,
    examined it, and put it back where he found it.5
    At the moment of discovery, the firefighters were legally present in Kelly’s bedroom.
    They needed no warrant to be there. The discovery of the crack pipe occurred during the course
    of their emergency response duties, only after their medical assessment led them to suspect
    Kelly’s condition might be drug induced. They did not go beyond their charge or engage in a
    subterfuge to undertake some criminal investigation. After the police officers were called to the
    scene, the firefighters specifically alerted them to the “glass tube” crack pipe. The firefighters
    remained with Kelly in his bedroom.
    Having followed in the firefighters’ footsteps, Officer Motley had probable cause to
    arrest Kelly for cocaine possession. He likewise had the authority to search Kelly incident to his
    arrest. See Slayton, 41 Va. App. at 108, 582 S.E.2d at 451. It was that post-arrest search which
    resulted in the seizure of the second crack pipe, the crack rock, and the drug paraphernalia ⎯ all
    5
    At oral argument on appeal, Kelly conceded he never argued in the trial court that “the
    firefighter, when he was testifying about the glass tube, should have said, ‘glass tube, i.e. crack
    pipe.’” Nor did he assert this point in his appellate brief. For this reason, we agree with the
    Commonwealth that Kelly waived this argument under Rules 5A:18 and 5A:20(e). At any rate,
    we find no merit in Kelly’s assertion (made during oral argument on appeal) that the trial judge
    inferred too much from Henderlite’s testimony. Read in context, Henderlite’s testimony ⎯
    particularly when coupled with Officer Motley’s testimony ⎯ fully supports the factual basis
    implicit in the trial court’s holding that Officer Motley “can be there” after Henderlite’s
    discovery of the glass tube. On appeal of a suppression motion, we “give ‘due weight to the
    inferences drawn from those facts by resident judges and local law enforcement officers.’”
    Slayton, 41 Va. App. at 105, 582 S.E.2d at 449-50 (citations omitted); Jones, 29 Va. App. at 366,
    512 S.E.2d at 166 (recognizing that we must give “due weight to inferences appearing to have
    been drawn by the trial court”).
    -7-
    items within Kelly’s reach in the close confines of his bedroom. See Chimel v. California, 
    395 U.S. 752
    , 763 (1969) (holding that a search incident to arrest in a home may include the area
    within the arrestee’s “immediate control”).6
    III.
    The trial court correctly denied Kelly’s suppression motion. As in Jones, the police
    officers merely “followed in the footsteps” of the firefighters and did not exceed the permissible
    scope of their intrusion. Jones, 29 Va. App. at 371, 512 S.E.2d at 169.7 For this reason, neither
    Kelly’s arrest nor the resulting search incident to that arrest violated the Fourth Amendment.
    Affirmed.
    6
    Whether the firearm should have been suppressed is not a question before us. We thus
    offer no opinion on it.
    7
    Neither party cited Jones to the trial judge. But it is wrong to presume the judge did not
    understand the legal principles discussed in Jones. “The judge is presumed to know the law and
    to apply it correctly in each case.” Crest v. Commonwealth, 
    40 Va. App. 165
    , 175 n.3, 
    578 S.E.2d 88
    , 91 n.3 (2003) (citation omitted); see also Breeden v. Commonwealth, 
    43 Va. App. 169
    , 188, 
    596 S.E.2d 563
    , 572 (2004). Unless that presumption is rebutted, the very fact the trial
    judge ruled in favor of the Commonwealth necessarily implies that he decided all legally
    material factual disputes against the defendant. It follows, then, that “a reviewing court ‘faced
    with a record of historical facts that supports conflicting inferences must presume — even if it
    does not affirmatively appear in the record — that the trier of fact resolved any such conflicts in
    favor of the prosecution, and must defer to that resolution[.]’” Wright v. West, 
    505 U.S. 277
    ,
    296-97 (1992) (quoting Jackson v. Virginia, 
    443 U.S. 307
    , 326 (1979)). At oral argument on
    appeal, Kelly’s counsel stated that, even though no one cited Jones, the “underlying argument
    was similar” in the trial court. Finding nothing to rebut the presumption, we see no reason to
    reverse the factual inferences to favor the defendant on appeal.
    -8-
    Benton, J., dissenting.
    “[I]t is a cardinal principle that ‘searches conducted outside the judicial process, without
    prior approval by judge or magistrate, are per se unreasonable under the Fourth Amendment --
    subject only to a few specifically established and well-delineated exceptions.’” Mincey v.
    Arizona, 
    437 U.S. 385
    , 390 (1978) (citation omitted). Although government agents who act in
    the absence of a search warrant may “‘seek exemption from the constitutional mandate [by
    showing] that the exigencies of the situation make that course imperative,’” Chimel v. California,
    
    395 U.S. 752
    , 761 (1969) (citation omitted), the principle is well established that “the general
    requirement that a search warrant be obtained is not lightly to be dispensed with, and ‘the burden
    is on those seeking [an] exemption [from the requirement] to show a need for it.’” Id. at 762
    (citation omitted). The evidence in this case did not satisfy the Commonwealth’s burden to show
    an exigency existed that justified the police officers’ warrantless entry into Leroy Leslie Kelly’s
    home. Therefore, I would hold that the evidence the officers seized and Kelly’s arrest were the
    product of an illegal entry and search.
    I.
    The evidence proved that Scott Henderlite, a Henrico County fireman, went to Kelly’s
    home in response to a “call[ ] for a possible patient having a seizure.” When he arrived, three
    other firemen were already in a bedroom with Kelly. Kelly’s father was in the hallway outside
    the bedroom. The fireman testified that when he entered the bedroom Kelly “was sitting in [a]
    chair and he would get up and circle this area, sit back down, get up and circle the area.” He
    explained that Kelly “just seemed real agitated with the possible -- level of consciousness” and
    that his “concern was to try to calm [Kelly] and assess any kind of medical problems that he may
    have.” The fireman testified that they measured Kelly’s “vital signs” and found them to be
    within normal limits. He further testified as follows:
    -9-
    After assessing the patient, we were trying to determine what was
    causing his condition, and one of the possibilities that we came up
    with was a possible drug problem. And after ascertaining that, we
    began looking for needles, mainly for out safety.
    He found a glass tube under the bed, picked it up, and then put it back where he had found it.
    No police officers were present when this occurred, and the record suggests that they had
    not earlier been requested to go to Kelly’s residence. The fireman testified that after he saw the
    glass tube the Henrico police “eventually were . . . called to the scene.” When two police
    officers arrived, the fireman alerted them to the glass tube.
    Officer Motley was the first police officer to arrive. The record does not establish that
    anyone consented to his entry to the residence. When Motley entered the bedroom, Kelly was
    sitting and “being assessed by the [firemen].” He explained the following:
    When I initially got there, my initial conversation was I asked
    [Kelly] what was wrong. He said nothing was wrong. He said,
    “My father had called the fire department because I guess he
    thought I was sick.” I asked him about the tube that was in plain
    view in the floor. He said he didn’t know what that was, the fire
    guys had brought a lot of stuff in and they must have brought that
    in. He stated he had never used drugs before.
    When Officer Trunk arrived, Officer Motley was already at the residence. Officer Trunk
    testified that he went to the bedroom and did not testify that anyone consented to his entry to the
    residence. He described the following events that occurred after he entered:
    [Kelly] was actually standing up and Officer Motley had to ask
    him for his ID. There was stuff that’s all over the ground here,
    pencils, markers, some scissors, and he bent down and attempted
    to pick those up. Officer Motley said, “Don’t worry about that.
    Just stand on up for me.” Trying to interview [Kelly] more about
    what had happened and again he was just saying nothing
    happened, not much happened. And then he bent down again to
    pick up and retrieve all the stuff to kind of clean up the room,
    because there was stuff scattered all over the floor.
    - 10 -
    Officer Motley testified that he asked for Kelly’s identification after “the fire guys had
    finished with their assessment.” He gave no reason for asking Kelly for an identification
    document but does explain the following:
    At that point he stood up and he started bending down towards the
    floor. And there was no ID down on the floor, but there were other
    items. The room was in disarray, like a table had been knocked
    over, there were scissors, pencils. There was a screwdriver in the
    floor and he was reaching down towards that and I told him not to
    do that any more.
    *       *       *       *       *      *       *
    I told him not to bend down on the floor any more. A few seconds
    later he bent down again. At that point I placed him in a pair of
    handcuffs and informed him that he was not under arrest, but I was
    detaining him because he was making me nervous bending down
    towards potential weapons on the floor.
    After Officer Motley handcuffed Kelly, he examined the tube the fireman earlier had
    found and decided to arrest Kelly. He explained his reason for doing so as follows:
    Q. Once you observed that the tube with the white substance, did
    eventually you place [Kelly] under arrest?
    A. I was trying not to. I was hoping he would go to the hospital to
    get treated voluntarily, so I could take the items to the lab and not
    have to babysit him at the hospital, if we placed him under arrest.
    There were some issues. He didn’t want to go. The firefighters
    were going to do implied consent, so just to make it easier I
    officially placed him under arrest, so there wouldn’t be any issues
    with consent to treatment.
    *       *       *       *       *      *       *
    Q. And you arrested him, you said because you wanted to not
    have a problem with him giving consent for treatment, you wanted
    to get him out of the room?
    A. Correct. There were some gray areas in there and it just made
    it easy and I placed him under arrest.
    After Officer Motley arrested Kelly, he searched Kelly and the room as an incident to the arrest.
    - 11 -
    II.
    The Fourth Amendment affords a person in his home the highest protection from
    government intrusion.
    The Fourth Amendment protects the individual’s privacy in a
    variety of settings. In none is the zone of privacy more clearly
    defined than when bounded by the unambiguous physical
    dimensions of an individual’s home -- a zone that finds its roots in
    clear and specific constitutional terms: “The right of the people to
    be secure in their . . . houses . . . shall not be violated.” That
    language unequivocally establishes the proposition that “[at] the
    very core [of the Fourth Amendment] stands the right of a man to
    retreat into his own home and there be free from unreasonable
    governmental intrusion.”
    Payton v. New York, 
    445 U.S. 573
    , 589-90 (1980) (citations omitted). Because of these
    protections, the government bears a heavy burden of proving a compelling need to enter a home
    without a warrant. Welsh v. Wisconsin, 
    466 U.S. 740
    , 749-50 (1984); Chimel, 395 U.S. at 762.
    The Commonwealth did not meet that burden and did not suggest at trial that it had.
    Furthermore, the trial judge did not even address the reason for excusing the warrant requirement
    in this case. Kelly’s attorney argued that the evidence proved a warrantless entry by the police
    officers, that the officer received no consent to enter, and that the entry was not justified by
    exigent circumstances. The prosecutor did not in any fashion address the entry and only argued
    that the search was valid because it was “a search incident to [and] contemporaneous with the
    arrest.” In denying the motion to suppress, the trial judge merely ruled that the police officer
    “can be there.” For the first time on appeal, the Commonwealth argues that the police officers
    “lawfully followed in the footsteps of the firefighters.” At trial, however, the prosecutor argued
    no facts that would form the predicate basis for this suggestion and, indeed, never made this
    argument. Thus, we cannot conclude that the trial judge’s cryptic ruling that the officers “can be
    there” is sufficient to establish that the Commonwealth met its heavy burden of proof.
    - 12 -
    In support of the argument now made on appeal that the police officers “lawfully
    followed in the footsteps of the firefighters,” the Commonwealth relies upon Jones v.
    Commonwealth, 
    29 Va. App. 363
    , 
    512 S.E.2d 165
     (1999). Even if we assume the trial judge
    contemplated Jones when he ruled, it provides no basis upon which to uphold the trial judge’s
    refusal to suppress the evidence.
    Jones is based on the Supreme Court’s decision in Michigan v. Tyler, 
    436 U.S. 499
    (1978). Significantly, the Court held in Tyler that “the Fourth Amendment extends beyond the
    paradigmatic entry into a dwelling by a law enforcement officer [or health, fire, or building
    inspectors] in search of the fruits or instrumentalities of crime.” 436 U.S. at 504. The Court
    further held that even when the search is “for administrative purposes” the law recognizes
    no diminution in a person’s reasonable expectation of privacy nor
    in the protection of the Fourth Amendment simply because the
    official conducting the search wears the uniform of a firefighter
    rather than a policeman, or because his purpose is to ascertain the
    cause of a fire rather than to look for evidence of a crime, or
    because the fire might have been started deliberately.
    Id. at 506. In view of these principles, the Supreme Court reiterated that it has recognized only a
    narrow exception to the Fourth Amendment warrant requirement when an exigency exists,
    giving rise to “compelling need for action and no time to secure a warrant.” Id. at 509. It found
    such an exception in Tyler, holding as follows:
    A burning building clearly presents an exigency of sufficient
    proportions to render a warrantless entry “reasonable.” Indeed, it
    would defy reason to suppose that firemen must secure a warrant
    or consent before entering a burning structure to put out the blaze.
    And once in a building for this purpose, firefighters may seize
    evidence of arson that is in plain view.
    436 U.S. at 509. The Supreme Court specifically has noted that it “has recognized only a few
    such emergency conditions, see e.g., United States v. Santana, 
    427 U.S. 38
    , 42-43 (1976) (hot
    pursuit of a fleeing felon); Warden v. Hayden, 
    387 U.S. 294
    , 298-99 (1967) (same); Schmerber
    - 13 -
    v. California, 
    384 U.S. 757
    , 770-71 (1966) (destruction of evidence); Michigan v. Tyler, 
    436 U.S. 499
    , 509 (1978) (ongoing fire), and [has further noted that it] has actually applied only the
    ‘hot pursuit’ doctrine to arrests in the home, see Santana, supra.” Welsh, 466 U.S. at 750.
    We relied upon the Tyler fire exception in Jones, where the evidence established that
    “police and firefighters responded to a fire at appellant’s apartment.” 29 Va. App. at 366, 512
    S.E.2d at 166. As a firefighter was ventilating the building and searching for people inside, he
    found a gun and narcotics. Id. at 366-67, 512 S.E.2d at 166. Citing Tyler, we held that the
    exigent circumstances of the fire negated any claim that a Fourth Amendment violation occurred
    when the firefighter discovered the contraband. We further held that “[t]he exigency created by
    the fire still existed when [the police officer] entered the building” in response to the firefighter’s
    summons to come and view his discovery. Jones, 29 Va. App. at 372, 512 S.E.2d at 169.
    The rule we adopted in Jones is that the exigency of a fire excused the warrant
    requirement and permitted “intrusion by government officials [to] continue for a reasonable time
    after the fire has been extinguished to allow fire officials to fulfill their duties, including making
    sure the fire will not rekindle, and investigating the cause of the fire.” 29 Va. App. at 369, 512
    S.E.2d at 168; accord Tyler, 436 U.S. at 510. In Tyler, the Supreme Court reasoned that entry
    and reentry by fire and other personnel were “continuations of the first entry,” did not require a
    warrant, and were thus reasonable. Id. at 510-11. Both Tyler and Jones recognize, however, that
    when the exigency ends a warrant is required. Tyler, 501 U.S. at 510; Jones, 29 Va. App. at 369,
    512 S.E.2d at 168.
    Tyler and Jones do not assert or support the proposition that police have a right of entry
    to follow the “footsteps” of firemen who enter a home to provide para-medical assistance or to
    transport a person to seek medical assistance. Simply put, Tyler and Jones do not provide the
    proper analytical framework for this case because the exigency that excused the warrant
    - 14 -
    requirement in those cases, that is, a fire, did not exist here. The evidence proved that the sole
    justification for the police officers’ warrantless entry was to investigate the fireman’s belief that
    the tube he found while looking around the room for his “safety” may have contained a narcotic.
    When Kelly’s father gave firemen consent to enter the home, no fire or threat of fire
    existed. The evidence also did not prove a life-threatening medical condition existed. The
    fireman testified that when he arrived, although Kelly was “agitated” and behaving strangely,
    Kelly appeared to be conscious and his vital signs were “within normal limits.” The fireman, by
    his own admission, said the search was not done to diagnose or treat Kelly, but “primarily for
    [the firemen’s] safety.” In addition, the evidence failed to establish that a medical emergency
    existed when the police arrived. Kelly was responding and had normal vital signs. The police
    officers used the occasion to interrogate him about criminal conduct. Moreover, Officer Trunk
    testified that after Kelly had been arrested and led from the room, they allowed Kelly to return to
    the room to get a jacket and shoes before the firemen took him to the hospital. This evidence
    simply failed to prove an exigency or a medical emergency.
    The mere fact that firemen or other para-medical personnel have entered a home does not
    eliminate the protection the Fourth Amendment affords an individual against warrantless
    governmental intrusion. Likewise, entry into a home by one government employee does not
    mean that law enforcement officers can follow into the home, for any purpose, and without a
    warrant.
    Without a fire, or an exigency arising from a fire, there was no reason for the police
    officers to enter Kelly’s home without a warrant. That they were “called to the scene” is not a
    basis upon which they could lawfully enter Kelly’s residence without a warrant or consent. The
    fireman’s discovery of a broken glass tube in the home does not excuse the entry by the police
    officers without first obtaining a warrant.
    - 15 -
    What occurred here is precisely what the Fourth Amendment expressly prohibits: an
    officer in the field, instead of a neutral and detached magistrate, made the determination that
    probable cause existed to enter Kelly’s home.
    The point of the Fourth Amendment, which often is not grasped by
    zealous officers, is not that it denies law enforcement the support
    of the usual inferences that reasonable men draw from evidence.
    Its protection consists in requiring those inferences be drawn by a
    neutral, detached magistrate instead of being judged by the officer
    engaged in the often competitive enterprise of ferreting out crime.
    Any assumption that evidence sufficient to support a magistrate’s
    disinterested determination to issue a search warrant will justify
    the officers in making a search without a warrant would reduce the
    [Fourth] Amendment to a nullity and leave the people’s homes
    secure only in the discretion of police officers.
    Johnson v. United States, 
    333 U.S. 10
    , 13-14 (1948) (footnote omitted). Likewise, the fireman,
    acting in a para-medical capacity, was not constitutionally authorized to make a probable cause
    determination and invite police officers to enter the residence without a warrant, to search the
    premises, and to make a warrantless arrest within the residence.
    “Prior decisions of [the Supreme] Court . . . have emphasized that exceptions to the
    warrant requirement are ‘few in number and carefully delineated.’” Welsh, 466 U.S. at 749
    (citations omitted).8
    8
    Because individuals possess the highest expectation of privacy in their homes, the
    Supreme Court “ordinarily afford[s] the most stringent Fourth Amendment protection” to the
    sanctity of private dwellings. United States v. Martinez-Fuente, 
    428 U.S. 543
    , 561 (1976).
    Thus, the police officer’s warrantless entry to Kelly’s home and seizure therein are perforce in a
    different category of constitutional violations than seizures such as in United States v. Jacobsen,
    
    466 U.S. 109
    , 111-12 (1984) (where federal agents reopened a package in a Federal Express
    office and found cocaine after employees in that office earlier had opened the package and found
    white powder), and in Illinois v. Andreas, 
    463 U.S. 765
    , 767 (1983) (where a customs inspector
    opened a package at the airport, found concealed marijuana, and then permitted a drug
    enforcement officer to test the marijuana before resealing it). Significantly, in neither case did
    the officers use the discovery of narcotics as a basis to enter a residence without a warrant. In
    Jacobsen, the officers “obtained a warrant to search the place to which [the package] was
    addressed, executed the warrant, and arrested respondents.” 466 U.S. at 112. In Andreas, the
    officers delivered the package to an apartment then “left to secure a warrant to enter and search
    respondent’s apartment.” 463 U.S. at 767. Although an officer later arrested Andreas after he
    - 16 -
    The presence of a search warrant serves a high function. Absent
    some grave emergency, the Fourth Amendment has interposed a
    magistrate between the citizen and the police. This was done not
    to shield criminals nor to make the home a safe haven for illegal
    activities. It was done so that an objective mind might weigh the
    need to invade that privacy in order to enforce the law. The right
    of privacy was deemed too precious to entrust to the discretion of
    those whose job is the detection of crime and the arrest of
    criminals.
    McDonald v. United States, 
    335 U.S. 451
    , 455-56 (1948).9
    emerged from his apartment with the package, the seizure and arrest did not occur inside the
    residence without a warrant even though the officers knew from the prior discovery during an
    administrative search at the airport that narcotics were within the apartment. In both Jacobsen
    and Andreas, the officers sought warrants to enter and search the residences because they
    understood the Supreme Court’s unambiguous ruling that the warrantless “physical entry of the
    home is the chief evil against which the wording of the Fourth Amendment is directed.” United
    States v. United States District Court, Eastern District of Michigan, 
    407 U.S. 297
    , 313 (1972).
    9
    The Payton mandate is quite clear: absent exigent circumstances, the threshold of the
    home cannot be crossed without a warrant. 445 U.S. at 583-90. Yet, the Commonwealth would
    have us adopt a rule that simply ignores the Fourth Amendment’s fundamental protection of the
    home. In this case, officers could have easily obtained a warrant, affirming the warrant’s
    procedure, “long adhered to” and designed to “minimize the danger of needless intrusions” as
    occurred here. Id. at 586. The historical foundation of the Fourth Amendment required a
    warrant under these circumstances.
    It is thus perfectly clear that the evil the Amendment was
    designed to prevent was broader than the abuse of a general
    warrant. Unreasonable searches or seizures conducted without any
    warrant at all are condemned by the plain language of the first
    clause of the Amendment. Almost a century ago the Court stated
    in resounding terms that the principles reflected in the Amendment
    “reached farther than the concrete form” of the specific cases that
    gave it birth, and “apply to all invasions on the part of the
    government and its employees of the sanctity of a man’s home and
    the privacies of life.”
    Id. at 585 (quoting Boyd v. United States, 
    116 U.S. 616
    , 630 (1886)).
    The Court’s reasoning in Payton is based on the heightened expectations of privacy
    inherent in private residences. Thus, the Court recognized that “‘[a] greater burden is placed . . .
    on officials who enter a home or dwelling without consent’” because “‘[f]reedom from intrusion
    into the home or dwelling is the archetype of the privacy protection secured by the Fourth
    Amendment.’” 445 U.S. at 587 (quoting Dorman v. United States, 
    435 F.2d 385
    , 389 (D.C. Cir.
    1970)) (emphasis added). The Court continued:
    - 17 -
    This case expands the exceptions to the warrant requirement in a way not supported by
    the rationale for creating the exceptions. For these reasons, I dissent.
    “To be arrested in the home involves not only the invasion of those
    attendant to all arrests, but also an invasion of the sanctity of the
    home. This is simply too substantial an invasion to allow without
    a warrant . . . in the absence of exigent circumstances, even when it
    is accomplished . . . when probable cause is clearly present.”
    Payton, 445 U.S. at 588-89 (quoting United States. v. Reed, 
    572 F.2d 412
    , 423 (1978))
    (emphasis added).
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