State v. Curet

346 Conn. 306
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedMarch 7, 2023
DocketSC20521
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 346 Conn. 306 (State v. Curet) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Curet, 346 Conn. 306 (Colo. 2023).

Opinion

STATE OF CONNECTICUT v. SHAILA M. CURET (SC 20521) Robinson, C. J., and McDonald, D’Auria, Mullins, Ecker and Alexander, Js.

Syllabus

Convicted, on a conditional plea of nolo contendere, of the crime of posses- sion of narcotics with intent to sell, the defendant appealed to the Appellate Court, claiming that the trial court improperly had denied her motion to suppress certain evidence seized by the police following their warrantless entry into her apartment. Z, a police officer, had been dispatched to an apartment building in which the defendant resided in response to a 911 call from C, a resident of the building, reporting gunshots and an attempted burglary. C reported seeing a man in a hooded shirt exit a vehicle outside the building and then hearing an altercation and gunshots. C also reported that the man in the hooded shirt then exited the building’s front door and fled in the vehicle, that a second man exited the building’s back door and fled in a different vehicle, and that, after they had left, C found a knife with white paint chips on it in the building’s laundry room. When Z arrived, C gave Z the knife and recounted the incident. C stated to Z that he had seen the man in the hooded shirt enter the building, that he heard loud banging on the defendant’s door, and that an altercation then occurred in the hallway in front of the defendant’s apartment. According to C, the alterca- tion moved into the laundry room, which was a few feet away from the defendant’s apartment, before C heard gunshots and saw the man in March 7, 2023 CONNECTICUT LAW JOURNAL Page 21

346 Conn. 306 MARCH, 2023 307 State v. Curet the hooded shirt run out of the front door. Z then proceeded to investigate the building and, upon entering the laundry room, found, among other things, a spent shell casing, what appeared to be a bullet fragment embedded in a wall, a bullet hole in the molding around the laundry room’s back door, and a fresh, blood like stain on the wall next to it. In the apartment building hallway, Z observed footprints on the wall across from the defendant’s apartment, indicative of a struggle, white paint chips at the base of the defendant’s door, and fresh pry marks on the door and doorframe. C informed Z that two people lived in the defendant’s apartment and that he feared that one of them could have been involved in the altercation. C confirmed that the defendant’s car was in the building’s parking lot and expressed concern to Z that the defendant may be inside her apartment suffering from a gunshot or stab wound. Z then attempted to look inside the defendant’s apartment through a window, but the blinds were drawn, and he received no response when he knocked repeatedly on the defendant’s door. Con- cerned that someone inside might be injured, Z and his superior officer, without first obtaining a warrant, forced their way into the defendant’s apartment. Although no one was found in the apartment, Z observed, in plain view, various drug paraphernalia. At that point, the search was stopped, and the police obtained a search warrant. A subsequent search yielded, inter alia, narcotics. After a hearing on the defendant’s motion to suppress the narcotics seized from her apartment, the trial court denied the motion, concluding that the exigent circumstances and emer- gency aid doctrines justified the warrantless entry into the defendant’s apartment. On appeal from the judgment of conviction, the Appellate Court reversed and remanded the case with direction to grant the defen- dant’s motion to suppress, concluding that the exigent circumstances doctrine was inapplicable because there was no basis on which a reason- able police officer would believe that probable cause justified entry into the defendant’s apartment and that the emergency aid doctrine was inapplicable because a reasonable police officer would not have believed that a medical emergency existed inside the apartment. On the granting of certification, the state appealed to this court.

Held that, although the Appellate Court correctly concluded that the exigent circumstances doctrine did not support the officers’ warrantless entry into the defendant’s apartment, it incorrectly concluded that the entry was not justified under the emergency aid doctrine, and, accordingly, this court reversed the Appellate Court’s judgment and remanded the case with direction to affirm the trial court’s judgment:

The exigent circumstances doctrine applies exclusively to situations in which the police, acting in their crime fighting capacity, have probable cause to believe that a crime has been or is about to be committed and reasonably believe that, in the time it would take for them to obtain a warrant, the suspect would be able to destroy evidence, flee, or endanger Page 22 CONNECTICUT LAW JOURNAL March 7, 2023

308 MARCH, 2023 346 Conn. 306 State v. Curet the safety of others, whereas the emergency aid doctrine, which is rooted in the police’s community caretaking function, does not require that the police have probable cause to enter a home if their purpose in doing so is to render emergency assistance, provided there is an objectively reasonable basis for believing that an occupant is seriously injured or is imminently threatened with serious injury.

The state did not claim that the police had probable cause to search the defendant’s apartment for evidence or to make an arrest but, instead, argued on appeal that the warrantless entry was for the purpose of rendering medical aid to someone inside the apartment injured in the altercation overheard by C, and, accordingly, the warrantless entry was not supported by the exigent circumstances doctrine.

Although the police were acting in their crime control function when they arrived at the apartment building, it was apparent that, by the time they entered the defendant’s apartment, they were acting pursuant to their community caretaking function, as the police were responding to reports of gunshots and an attempted burglary, and, in addition to the inherent risk of violence that generally accompanies burglaries, there were numerous signs of violence, including bullet holes, shell casings, and signs of a struggle that would have heightened the officers’ concerns that someone may have been injured during the commission of the crimes in question, and, given the sequence of events reported by C, it was reasonable for the police officers to have believed that the person injured in the altercation was someone from the defendant’s apartment who either interrupted an attempted burglary, was the intended victim of the burglary, or had some other reason to engage in an argument that spilled out into the hallway outside of the defendant’s apartment and into the laundry room.

In evaluating the constitutionality of the warrantless entry under the emergency aid doctrine, the Appellate Court should have applied the reasonable belief standard, which is applied by reference to the circum- stances then confronting the officers, including the need for prompt assessment of sometimes ambiguous information concerning potentially serious consequences, and which questions whether the officers would have been derelict in their duty if they had acted otherwise.

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Related

State v. Leuders
Connecticut Appellate Court, 2024
State v. Lueders
225 Conn. App. 612 (Connecticut Appellate Court, 2024)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
346 Conn. 306, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-curet-conn-2023.