Commonwealth v. Thach
This text of 94 N.E.3d 435 (Commonwealth v. Thach) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Appeals Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
After a jury trial in the District Court, the defendant was convicted of five firearm offenses.2 The charges were based on evidence that the defendant possessed a firearm and fired multiple shots at another individual near a dwelling. The defendant appeals from his convictions, arguing that the motion judge erred in denying his motion to suppress. We affirm.
Background.3 On October 18, 2013, the Lynn police department received a 911 call that an individual had fired multiple shots in the area of a dwelling. When the police arrived a few minutes later, eyewitnesses at the scene told the officers that the armed shooter had entered the dwelling near where the shots were fired. The officers set up a perimeter around the dwelling. The officers did not hear any shots or calls for help from the building, but they decided that they needed to go inside "to check ... if there [ ] [was] anybody in danger inside or out."
The officers knocked on the front door. After receiving no answer, they entered the building through a window on the first floor after pushing a portable air conditioning unit out of the window. Once inside the building, they conducted a protective sweep looking for the shooter and any potential victims. During that sweep, the officers found the defendant-who matched the descriptions of the shooter given by the eyewitnesses-on the third floor. No weapons were found on or near the defendant at that time. After escorting the defendant to the second floor, the officers returned to the third floor, where they found two firearms.
When the defendant was sitting outside of the building accompanied by officers, he was approached by one of the eyewitnesses who earlier had given his description to the police. That eyewitness (first eyewitness) volunteered that the defendant was the person who fired the shots. After the defendant was arrested, a bullet was found on his person.
Arguing that the evidence discovered inside the building and on his person after his arrest was the product of an unjustified warrantless search of the residence, the defendant moved to suppress it, along with the identification of him by the first eyewitness. The motion judge initially denied this motion in toto, but then, on reconsideration, allowed it as to the two firearms that were discovered after the protective sweep had concluded. On appeal, the defendant argues that the judge erred to the extent that he denied the motion to suppress, and that his convictions should be vacated on this basis.4
Discussion. This appeal turns on whether the police could rely on the emergency aid exception to the general requirement that residences can be searched only with a warrant. See Commonwealth v. Duncan,
In this case, the first prong of the test was satisfied. The motion judge found that live rounds were shot near a dwelling, that the whole situation was "very fluid and dangerous," and that the witnesses testified that the shooter walked into the dwelling immediately after the shooting occurred. In colloquial terms, based on the information they possessed at the time, the police were facing an "active shooter" scenario. Under these circumstances, the police officers had reasonable grounds to believe that an emergency existed, because the shooter could have injured or killed those who were or could have been in the building; the shooter also could have fired into the street again. See Commonwealth v. Paniaqua,
The second prong of the test was satisfied as well, because the officers initially conducted only a limited protective sweep of the premises, that is, they took only actions that were minimally necessary to uncover the shooter and his potential victims. See Commonwealth v. Kaeppeler,
In sum, we conclude that the judge did not err to the extent he denied the motion to suppress.
Judgments affirmed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
94 N.E.3d 435, 92 Mass. App. Ct. 1107, 2017 Mass. App. Unpub. LEXIS 851, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-thach-massappct-2017.