United States v. Jose Luis Arellano-Ochoa, United States of America v. Jose Luis Arellano-Ochoa

461 F.3d 1142, 2006 U.S. App. LEXIS 22466, 2006 WL 2506395
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedAugust 31, 2006
Docket04-30545, 05-30328
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 461 F.3d 1142 (United States v. Jose Luis Arellano-Ochoa, United States of America v. Jose Luis Arellano-Ochoa) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Jose Luis Arellano-Ochoa, United States of America v. Jose Luis Arellano-Ochoa, 461 F.3d 1142, 2006 U.S. App. LEXIS 22466, 2006 WL 2506395 (9th Cir. 2006).

Opinion

KLEINFELD, Circuit Judge:

We publish to clarify Fourth Amendment law regarding the police opening a screen door without a search warrant. We also speak to dismissal without prejudice for a speedy trial violation.

FACTS

Wyoming police caught an illegal alien headed to Arizona with $15,000 cash in the car. The car was registered to Daniel Priego of 640 Birch Lane, Billings, Montana. The driver, an illegal alien, claimed that he had been hired to drive the car to Arizona, deliver it to a woman who was going to “do something” with it, and then drive it to Montana and deliver it to the address on the car registration. He also said that there was an illegal alien at the Montana address. The police called U.S. Border Patrol in Montana to tell them that there was probably an illegal alien at the address at which the car was registered.

The Border Patrol agent went to the address for what he called a “knock and talk.” Because he did not want to be without backup and he thought drugs might be involved, 1 he got a couple of Montana state narcotics investigators to go with him. All three investigators were in plainclothes and used unmarked cars. A young woman was sitting on the steps of the trailer smoking a cigarette and watching her two toddlers play. The Border Patrol agent identified himself and asked her if anyone else was there. She called into the trailer for “Daniel” or “Danny.”

The screen door to the trailer was closed, though the solid door behind it was wide open. The screen door was mesh on the top half but solid metal on the bottom half, so visibility was limited to what could be seen through the top half. One of the *1144 narcotics detectives noticed that the usual furniture, such as a kitchen table, was missing — a fact that he found odd in a house with toddlers. As the Border Patrol agent went to knock, a man came toward the door. But instead of talking to the officers, the man swung the solid door almost shut, dodged quickly out of sight behind it, and the officers saw the blinds at the front window shut.

The Border Patrol agent immediately opened the screen door, pushed open the partially shut solid door, and started in. One of the narcotics detectives saw a .45 semi-automatic on the floor at the doorjamb (where the solid bottom half of the closed screen door had blocked it from view) and said “gun.” The Border Patrol agent saw the man make a move toward the gun, and stepped between him and the gun. The agents quickly entered, subdued the man after a brief scuffle, and handcuffed him. A protective sweep of the house revealed evidence of drug dealing, so the officers obtained a search warrant and found cocaine, methamphetamine, a sawed-off rifle, and $1,000 in small bills.

It turned out that “Daniel Priego” was really appellant Jose Luis Arellano-Ochoa, an illegal alien. The border patrol agent opened the screen door because the man’s “furtive” movements made the agent concerned for officer safety and the safety of the woman and toddlers nearby. After the man was subdued, the border patrol agent asked where he was born, and Arellano-Ochoa said “Mexico.” The agent asked for identification, and Arellano-Ochoa pointed to the counter, where he had a Mexican driver’s license, a Mexican border crossing card, and a permit for extension of the border crossing card. 2 The border patrol agent then knew that a crime was probable, because non-immigrant aliens, legal or not, generally are not permitted to possess firearms. 3 Arellano-Ochoa had not yet been “Mirandized.” As the officers took Arellano-Ochoa away, he told his girlfriend he would need bail money and she reached into the diaper bag she had next to her. The officers quickly grabbed it to avoid danger and put it in the trailer. After they got a search warrant, they found about $1,000 in small bills in the diaper bag.

ANALYSIS

A. The Search

The district court denied a motion to suppress the fruits of the search of the residence. The defense’s theory was that the entry into the trailer was illegal and the search warrant was the fruit of the illegal entry, so all the evidence found in the residence should have been suppressed. We review the denial of the motion to suppress de novo, 4 and reach the same conclusion as the district court.

Arellano-Ochoa correctly points out that the officers did not know about the gun until after they opened his screen door with neither permission nor a warrant. He argues that his actions were reasonable because, from his point of view, some unidentified men came to his doorway and he had no obligation to keep his door open. This argument does not affect the result *1145 because the officer’s entry must be evaluated objectively from the officer’s point of view. 5

We first address whether opening the screen door has any Fourth Amendment significance. Whether opening a screen door breaches a reasonable expectation of privacy depends on the circumstances. During winter in a cold climate, people ordinarily keep the solid door shut. About the only way for mail and package delivery people, solicitors, missionaries, children funding school trips, and neighbors to knock on the door is to open the screen door and knock on the solid door. People understand that visitors will need to open the screen door, and have no expectation to the contrary. The reason why people do not feel that their privacy is breached by opening the screen door to knock is that it isn’t; the solid door protects their privacy.

In the summer, when people leave their solid doors open for ventilation, the screen door is all that separates the inside from the outside. People can get a resident’s attention by knocking on the screen door without opening it. Where the solid door is wide open, the screen door is what protects the privacy of the people inside— not just their visual privacy, which it protects only partially, but also their privacy from undesired intrusion. Where the solid door is open so that the screen door is all that protects the privacy of the residents, opening the screen door infringes upon a reasonable and legitimate expectation of privacy. That is what happened here.

The police cannot breach the reasonable expectation of privacy that people have in their homes without consent or a search warrant, unless one of the exceptions to the search warrant requirement applies. 6 Once the screen door was open and the officers spotted the gun, the legal distance to a justified entry was short indeed. But the gun was not spotted until after the agent opened the screen door. Where the screen door is the only barrier between the inside of the house and the outside, the police cannot open the screen door without consent or some exception. Arellano-Ochoa did not consent.

We are satisfied, though, that exigent circumstances justified opening the screen door. Exigent circumstances justify a warrantless intrusion into a home where a reasonable officer “would believe that entry ...

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
461 F.3d 1142, 2006 U.S. App. LEXIS 22466, 2006 WL 2506395, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-jose-luis-arellano-ochoa-united-states-of-america-v-jose-ca9-2006.