The Supreme Court has ruled that law enforcement officials had flexibility to enter a home without a warrant based on reports that someone inside might need emergency help, a decision with implications for police tactics and the expectation of privacy in one’s home, reported The New York Times.
In a
unanimous decision, the justices said that the police in Montana had acted
appropriately when they entered an Army veteran’s home without a warrant
because they had an “‘objectively reasonable basis for believing’ that a
homeowner intended to take his own life and, indeed, may already have shot
himself,” Justice Elena Kagan wrote for the court.
The Fourth
Amendment of the Constitution prohibits unreasonable searches and provides
protections for a person’s home by generally prohibiting law enforcement from
entering without a warrant.
The
Supreme Court has carved out several exceptions, including for when police
believe an occupant is seriously injured or facing an imminent threat of
injury.
The
question in the Montana case was what level of certainty police must have that
an emergency is underway before they can enter a home without a warrant.
Police
were called to the home of William Trevor Case in September 2021 by his
ex-girlfriend, who feared he was suicidal. The Army veteran had a loaded
handgun, she told police, and he had previously threatened to kill himself.
Mr. Case
was well known to law enforcement officers who went to check on him at his home
near Butte, Mont. Mr. Case had “tried this suicide by cop” stuff before, one of
the officers said, using profanity, according to a body-cam recording of the
police response.
The
officers knocked on Mr. Case’s door, yelled and shined flashlights through the
windows. They could see empty beer cans, an empty handgun holster and a notepad
with handwriting, which the officers thought was a possible suicide note, court
records show. After about 40 minutes, they entered through the unlocked front
door without a warrant.
When Mr.
Case suddenly emerged from a closet, he stretched out his arm with what
appeared to be a gun, and an officer shot him in the abdomen. The veteran, who
survived, was convicted of assaulting the officer.
He
appealed that conviction, arguing that a gun and other evidence from his home
should not have been allowed to be presented at trial because the officers had
violated the Fourth Amendment by coming into his home without a warrant.
Mr. Case’s
lawyer told the court that police should have met a high bar of “probable
cause” for the intrusion — a standard his lawyer said would provide “a level of
certainty that avoids needless and dangerous confrontations, and enables police
and emergency medical workers to provide aid when occupants urgently need it.”
But the
court on Wednesday declined to adopt that higher standard, which would have
been borrowed from the criminal context. Instead, it reaffirmed a 2006
decision: that it is not a violation of the Fourth Amendment when the police
make a warrantless entry, if officers have an “objectively reasonable” basis to
believe that an occupant is “seriously injured or threatened with such injury.”
The court
said it was reasonable for the police to believe Mr. Case needed emergency aid,
based on the phone call with Mr. Case’s ex-girlfriend and what the officers
could observe at the Army veteran’s home.
“If Case
had already shot himself, he could have been severely injured and in need of
immediate medical care. And if he had not, the risk of suicide remained acute,
given all the facts then known to the officers,” Justice Kagan wrote.
Justices
Sonia Sotomayor and Neil M. Gorsuch joined the majority but wrote separately,
with Justice Sotomayor cautioning that it may not always be “objectively
reasonable” for police responding to a mental health crisis to make a
warrantless entry.
She cited
studies showing that people with serious mental health conditions were
disproportionately likely to be injured and killed during police interactions
compared to the general population. The justice also warned that the presence
of law enforcement could escalate such situations, “putting both the occupant
and the officers in danger.”
The
“objectively reasonable basis” test affirmed by the court, Justice Sotomayor
wrote, “demands careful attention to the case-specific risks that attend mental
health crises, and requires officers to act reasonably in response.”
In
response to the ruling, the Constitutional Accountability Center, which had
filed a brief in support of Mr. Case’s position, expressed concern that the
court’s decision would do nothing to prevent officers from using emergency aid
as a pretext for home intrusions.
Austin
Knudsen, Montana’s attorney general, praised the court’s ruling, saying in a
statement that it would give law enforcement the ability to respond to
life-threatening emergencies and “allow officers to continue to keep their
communities and citizens safe to the best of their abilities.”
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