December 3, 2003 - Boston Globe (MA)
Court Upholds Police Right to Quick Entrance
Ruling allows officers into drug suspects' homes with little
wait
By Lyle Denniston, Boston Globe
WASHINGTON _ The Supreme Court Tuesday strengthened the power
of police to investigate drug crimes, ruling that officers are
allowed to break down the door of a private home to make a search
if no one answers their knock within 15 to 20 seconds.
That period is a long enough wait to let the occupants respond,
but not so long that anyone inside would have a realistic chance
to flush any drugs down a toilet or a kitchen sink, the court
said in a unanimous decision.
The justices said the ruling applies only to situations involving
serious crimes such as narcotics violations, and only those crimes
where the evidence is of a type that could be destroyed quickly.
The court has long held that police are obliged under the
Constitution to knock and announce themselves when they want
to enter a private dwelling, and it has said that police may
damage doors or windows sufficiently to gain entry if they need
to do so to enforce the law.
But the Supreme Court has never clarified how long the officers
must wait for someone to come to the door, and thus when the
officers may conclude that they must force their way in.
Insisting that it was not laying down a hard-and-fast constitutional
rule that would govern all forcible entries by police, the court
declared that the circumstances in this particular case made
a short wait acceptable: "We think that after 15 or 20 seconds
without a response, police could fairly suspect that cocaine
would be gone if they were reticent any longer."
Federal appeals courts have routinely held that similar waiting
times before entry was forced do not violate the Fourth Amendment
ban on "unreasonable searches and seizures."
The case involved a North Las Vegas, Nev., man, Lashawn Lowell
Banks, who pleaded guilty to possessing cocaine and having an
illegal gun, but then challenged the use of the evidence that
led to the charges. A federal appeals court overturned the guilty
pleas, finding that the evidence had been gathered unconstitutionally
because police did not wait long enough before breaking down
his door.
FBI agents and local police had obtained information that
Banks was selling cocaine at his apartment. They obtained a search
warrant to check it, and when they arrived, Banks apparently
was in the shower.
The officers knocked, announcing that they had a warrant.
But when they heard no response from inside, after waiting 15
to 20 seconds, they broke the door down with a battering ram.
They confronted Banks standing inside, naked, wet and still soapy
after emerging from the shower.
They searched the apartment, finding three weapons, a bulletproof
vest, cocaine, and a scale for weighing.
Justice David Souter, who wrote the decision, said: "What
matters is the opportunity to get rid of cocaine, which a prudent
dealer will keep near a commode or kitchen sink."
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