United States v. Rodriguez-Pacheco ( 2020 )


Menu:
  •           United States Court of Appeals
    For the First Circuit
    No. 18-1391
    UNITED STATES,
    Appellee,
    v.
    GABRIEL RODRÍGUEZ-PACHECO,
    Defendant, Appellant.
    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF PUERTO RICO
    [Hon. Jay A. García-Gregory, U.S. District Judge]
    Before
    Howard, Chief Judge,
    Thompson and Kayatta, Circuit Judges.
    Lauren E.S. Rosen, Assistant Federal Public Defender, with
    whom Eric Alexander Vos, Federal Public Defender, Vivianne M.
    Marrero, Assistant Federal Public Defender, Supervisor, Appeals
    Section, and Liza L. Rosado-Rodríguez, Research and Writing
    Specialist, were on brief, for appellant.
    Francisco A. Besosa-Martínez, Assistant United States
    Attorney, with whom Rosa Emilia Rodríguez-Vélez, United States
    Attorney, and Mariana E. Bauzá-Almonte, Assistant United States
    Attorney, Chief, Appellate Division, were on brief, for appellee.
    January 15, 2020
    THOMPSON, Circuit Judge.    Let's start our work with the
    big picture:   Gabriel Rodríguez-Pacheco ("Rodríguez") was a police
    officer for the Puerto Rico Police Department who was accused of
    domestic violence, and when some fellow officers showed up at his
    mother's house (where he was living) in connection with that
    accusation, a warrantless entry into the house and seizure of
    Rodríguez's cellphone, camera, and laptop ensued.    A later search
    of the laptop revealed incriminating evidence of the domestic abuse
    charge, as well as images of unrelated criminal conduct that form
    the basis for the charges against him in the case now before us.
    In the lead-up to his trial, Rodríguez moved to suppress the
    electronics and the information gleaned from them, along with
    statements he made to the police.      The lower court granted the
    motion as to some statements Rodríguez made, but denied it as to
    others.   Important here, the lower court denied Rodríguez's motion
    to suppress seized evidence.   Rodríguez appealed, and that's where
    we come in.
    But before we embark upon our analysis, we provide an
    up-front spoiler to explain why we forgo both a lengthy beginning-
    to-end rundown of the facts (arrest, search, and seizure) and a
    comprehensive recap of the lower court's reasoning, ultimately
    leap-frogging some of the arguments before us and not even reaching
    others.   We do this because, for reasons we'll explain, we agree
    with Rodríguez on a threshold (literally) issue:      the officers'
    - 2 -
    warrantless entry into the house, on the grounds that exigent
    circumstances      existed   (as     the    lower    court       found),    was
    unconstitutional,     and,   on   this   record,    there   is   no   evidence
    demonstrating a different exception to the warrant requirement.
    For reasons we will explain, we remand Rodríguez's case to the
    district   court    for   further   proceedings     consistent     with    this
    opinion.
    The Facts
    As is often the case in the motion-to-suppress context,
    the parties here do not share the same view of the facts.                   But
    when we review a challenge to a district court's denial of a motion
    to suppress, we are to "'view the facts in the light most favorable
    to the district court's ruling' on the motion."1            United States v.
    Camacho, 
    661 F.3d 718
    , 723 (1st Cir. 2011) (quoting United States
    v. Soares, 
    521 F.3d 117
    , 118 (1st Cir. 2008)).              And "[w]e recite
    the key facts as found by the district court, consistent with the
    record support, noting where relevant [Rodríguez]'s contrary view
    of the testimony presented at the suppression hearing."                 United
    States v. Young, 
    835 F.3d 13
    , 15 (1st Cir. 2016) (citing United
    States v. Werra, 
    638 F.3d 326
    , 328 (1st Cir. 2011)).
    1 Here, the facts were found by the magistrate judge who held
    the suppression hearing.    But after Rodríguez objected to the
    magistrate judge's recommended outcome, 28 U.S.C. § 636(b), the
    district court, in denying the motion to suppress, adopted the
    magistrate judge's findings and conclusions.
    - 3 -
    Officer Nelson Murillo-Rivera ("Officer Murillo"), who
    works for the Domestic Violence Division in the Ponce region of
    Puerto    Rico,   was   off-duty    on   February   28,    2015   when     he   was
    approached by his wife's coworker (we refer to her -- using common
    law enforcement parlance -- as "the victim"), who complained that
    Rodríguez, with whom she had once been in a relationship, had been
    sending her threatening text messages.            Officer Murillo testified
    that he saw these complained-of text messages in which Rodríguez
    was threatening to publish photos and videos of a sexual nature of
    the victim if she did not agree to rekindle their relationship.
    Officer Murillo reported the above-described episode to
    the   director    of    the   domestic   violence   unit;    later,2     he     was
    instructed by the district attorney to locate and arrest Rodríguez
    pursuant    to    "established     procedure."3      According     to    Officer
    Murillo, that procedure is why he did not get a warrant -- he said
    that, "according to [the procedure], . . . anyone alleged to have
    committed    domestic    violence    must    immediately    be    placed    under
    arrest."    And Officer Murillo testified that, in accordance with
    2 The passage of time between events is not crystal clear,
    particularly the time between the victim describing her complaint
    to Officer Murillo and the eventual excursion to Rodríguez's
    neighborhood.
    3 The procedure to which Officer Murillo was referring is
    Police Department General Order No. 2006-4.         This procedure
    reflects what is required by P.R. Laws Ann. tit. 8 §§ 601 et seq.,
    known as the "Law to Prevent and Intervene with Domestic Violence."
    More on this later.
    - 4 -
    that procedure and because Rodríguez was a police officer, the
    proper course of action was to locate and disarm him, explain the
    complaint to him, then place him under arrest.
    Intending to carry out this procedure, around midnight,
    Officer Murillo headed to Rodríguez's house in Yauco, Puerto Rico
    with several officers, one of whom was Officer Roberto Santiago
    ("Officer     Santiago").4   The   officers   had   trouble   locating
    Rodríguez's house until they came across a woman (who happened to
    be Rodríguez's sister) -- when the officers indicated that they
    were looking for Rodríguez, she led them to their mother's house,
    then went inside to tell Rodríguez the police were outside.
    Officer Murillo testified that Rodríguez "immediately"
    came outside to the front of the house. Officer Murillo introduced
    himself, informed Rodríguez that a woman had filed a domestic
    violence complaint against Rodríguez, and asked if he knew the
    woman.   Rodríguez said he knew the woman, and so Officer Murillo
    told Rodríguez that the officers needed to seize his service
    weapon, and he would have to go to the police station to be
    questioned.
    Officer Murillo did not handcuff Rodríguez, despite the
    point of the visit being to arrest him, and he explained that was
    4  The parties dispute how many officers went off to Yauco in
    search of Rodríguez -- and later, how many officers entered the
    house -- but we do not get into this since it makes no difference
    to our conclusion.
    - 5 -
    because Rodríguez "was very cooperative and his family looked like
    really decent people."
    Officer Murillo asked Rodríguez if he was armed -- he
    described the exchange as follows:
    . . . I asked him, "where is your weapon?" He said,
    "It's in my bedroom. I'll come right back and I'll go
    fetch it." Immediately I told him, "No, I'll go with
    you. You tell me where the weapon is and I'll seek it."
    To which he answered me, "Okay, no problem." He made a
    gesture with his hand and said, "follow me."
    Rodríguez    testified   that   he   did   not   consent   (verbally   or
    nonverbally) for Officer Murillo to enter the house.
    Officer   Murillo   followed   Rodríguez   into   the   house.
    Officer Santiago testified that he saw Officer Murillo follow
    Rodríguez into the house and decided to go in as well for the
    safety of Officer Murillo.
    For the reason we previewed above, we do not spill much
    ink to describe the events that unfolded after this -- both in the
    house and later at the police station -- but we do provide enough
    to contextually round out the story.        Once inside the house and
    then Rodriguez's bedroom, Officer Murillo retrieved the service
    weapon and also seized a Go-Pro camera, a white laptop, and a cell
    phone, all of which he believed could be related to the domestic
    violence accusation.     Officer Santiago testified that he didn't
    scan or sweep the bedroom for weapons or anything else that could
    pose a threat to his safety, and that Rodríguez was passive during
    - 6 -
    the seizure.      Then, at the police station,5 after Officer Murillo
    read Rodríguez his Miranda rights and Rodríguez signed a document
    indicating that he understood and wanted to invoke those rights,
    the two reviewed the complaint against Rodríguez, and Officer
    Murillo told Rodríguez he'd be spending the night in a cell.
    During     this   meeting,   Rodríguez    said   (according    to    Officer
    Murillo), "I'm going to ask you for something from the bottom of
    my heart" -- "please let me erase something from the computer."
    Officer Murillo refused, then took Rodríguez to a cell.             The next
    day, again according to Officer Murillo, Rodríguez "desperately"
    asked Murillo, "Who's coming to look for me, ICE, ICE?"
    Murillo got a search warrant for the seized electronics,
    and that's what ultimately put Rodríguez on the hook for the
    charges levied against him in the case before us -- authorities
    found videos and images of Rodríguez engaging in sexual conduct
    with the victim, as well as videos and images of Rodríguez engaging
    in sexual conduct with several female minors between the ages of
    16 and 17 years old.         On March 26, 2015, a federal grand jury
    indicted    Rodríguez   on   sixteen   counts    of   production    of   child
    pornography, violating 18 U.S.C. § 2251(a) and (e), and another
    5 A pre-Miranda conversation took place in the police car en
    route to the station, too, but Rodríguez successfully moved to
    suppress statements he made during the ride, so we need not
    describe them here.
    - 7 -
    count of possession of child pornography involving prepubescent
    minors, violating 18 U.S.C. § 2252A(a)(5)(B) and (b)(2).
    The Proceedings
    Before trial, Rodríguez filed a motion to suppress --
    specifically, he said the electronics that were seized and the
    files within them, his pre-Miranda statements, and the two post-
    Miranda statements all merited suppression.   As is relevant to our
    analysis today, Rodríguez argued there was no consent to enter the
    house, nor did any other exception to the warrant requirement
    apply.   The government opposed the motion, arguing solely that
    Rodríguez had consented to the officers' entry, and it would be
    "ludicrous" if officers had to wait outside while Rodríguez went
    in to fetch the weapon the officers were there to seize.       The
    magistrate judge held two hearings, then issued a Report and
    Recommendation ("R&R") granting the motion as to the pre-Miranda
    statements, but denying it as to everything else.
    In keeping with our approach to this point, we limit our
    recap of the R&R to that which is germane to our analysis, which,
    as we've said, is focused on the officers' entry into the house.
    The magistrate judge found that the officers had probable cause to
    arrest, and the arrest occurred the moment the police arrived at
    Rodríguez's home.6 Critically, the magistrate judge concluded that
    6Before us, Rodríguez does not challenge the probable cause
    to arrest or the moment of the arrest. So for purposes of his
    - 8 -
    the warrantless entry was constitutional, but there was no need to
    get into consent:      "[i]t is unnecessary to determine whether
    [Rodríguez] consented, because officers were authorized under the
    exigent circumstances doctrine to enter the home for the limited
    purpose of securing the weapon they knew was inside."   As to the
    seizure that followed the warrantless entry, the magistrate judge
    signed off on that as constitutionally permissible in light of the
    plain view doctrine.
    Rodríguez objected to the R&R, and so the case went to
    the district judge for a de novo review.   See 28 U.S.C. § 636(b).
    Rodríguez asserted that there was no record evidence to support
    the exigency determination -- indeed, the government had not even
    advanced that theory, so it had not proffered any evidence to
    support it.    In the Memorandum and Order that followed, the
    district judge adopted in full the R&R's "factually and legally
    supported" findings and conclusions.    Specifically, the district
    judge determined that the arrest was valid because the officers
    "had probable cause and there were exigent circumstances that
    justified entering the home."
    In due course, the case went to trial.7    Rodríguez was
    found guilty on all counts and sentenced to 262 months on counts
    appeal, probable cause is established, and he was arrested as soon
    as he stepped out of the house.
    7 Rodríguez explains that he went to trial to preserve the
    suppression issues now before us.
    - 9 -
    1-16 and 240 months for count 17, to be served concurrently with
    each other, and a fifteen-year term of supervised release.     This
    timely appeal followed.
    Discussion
    In undertaking our review of the denial of the motion to
    suppress, we review the lower court's factual findings for "clear
    error," 
    Camacho, 661 F.3d at 723
    , and as to the legal conclusions,
    such as "application of the law to the facts . . . and the district
    court's ultimate legal decision to grant or deny the motion to
    suppress," we review those de novo, 
    id. at 724.
        "On a motion to
    suppress evidence seized on the basis of a warrantless search, the
    presumption favors the defendant, and it is the government's burden
    to demonstrate the legitimacy of the search."     United States v.
    Delgado-Pérez, 
    867 F.3d 244
    , 250 (1st Cir. 2017) (quoting United
    States v. Winston, 
    444 F.3d 115
    , 123–24 (1st Cir. 2006)).
    To aid in our review, we lay out some tried-and-true Fourth
    Amendment principles.     It is axiomatic that the Fourth Amendment
    requires that all searches and seizures be reasonable, and the
    Supreme Court has ruled that reasonableness requires there be
    probable cause for the search or seizure and that a warrant is
    issued.   See U.S. Const. amend IV; Katz v. United States, 
    389 U.S. 347
    , 357 (1967).   Indeed, "'the Fourth Amendment has drawn a firm
    line at the entrance to the house' and warrantless entries into a
    home 'are presumptively unreasonable.'"     Morse v. Cloutier, 869
    - 10 -
    F.3d 16, 23 (1st Cir. 2017) (quoting Payton v. New York, 
    445 U.S. 573
    , 586 (1980)).     However, there are exceptions to the warrant
    requirement, such as the two at issue in this case:                    consent and
    exigent circumstances.       See, e.g., Pagán-González v. Moreno, 
    919 F.3d 582
    , 591 (1st Cir. 2019) (noting consent is "a jealously and
    carefully drawn exception to the warrant requirement" (quoting
    Georgia v. Randolph, 
    547 U.S. 103
    , 109 (2006) (internal quotations
    omitted))); United States v. Almonte-Báez, 
    857 F.3d 27
    , 34 (1st
    Cir. 2017) (concluding that exigent circumstances justified a
    warrantless entry into an apartment).
    Before us, the basic Fourth Amendment principles we just
    spelled out are the bedrock of Rodríguez's appellate contentions.
    Rodríguez challenges the warrantless entry, arguing that it was
    presumptively unreasonable, and, on this record, no exception to
    the warrant requirement existed. Homing in on the district court's
    findings only, he says there is no record evidence to support an
    exigency   determination:         he    was     unarmed,   had   not    threatened
    violence or been violent (there was no indication the officers
    believed he had been or would become violent -- quite the opposite
    since he was never handcuffed), had no history of violence, and,
    on the facts of his case, the presence of a gun in the house wasn't
    enough,    on   its   own,   to        demonstrate    exigent     circumstances
    warranting entry, especially when the presence of the gun wasn't
    - 11 -
    even connected to the domestic violence complaint that prompted
    the officers' visit in the first place.
    He's right. Here's how our analysis will go: the record
    evidence does not support a finding of exigent circumstances that
    comports with our case law; consent to enter was not addressed by
    the lower court; so, since a consent finding depends on credibility
    determinations that do not exist on this record, and we cannot
    make those credibility determinations for ourselves, consent as a
    justification for upholding the entry on appeal isn't a viable way
    into the house either.8   The upshot of all of this is that, on this
    8  To the extent the government points to General Order No.
    2006-4 to say the entry into the home was legal or somehow
    consensual, we cannot agree.     There simply is nothing on this
    record to allow us to do so.       Indeed, even assuming such an
    administrative procedure can permissibly strip those to whom it
    applies of certain constitutional protections and rights, and
    further assuming it can operate as an automatic consent to
    warrantless entry into a home or automatically creates an exigency
    (the need to find and seize service weapons of those accused of
    domestic violence), the record is devoid of any explication of how
    this administrative search/seizure procedure is carried out. See,
    e.g., Ruskai v. Pistole, 
    775 F.3d 61
    , 68 (1st Cir. 2014)
    (explaining the balancing act of looking at the public interest in
    the policy and the privacy concerns affected by it, Nat'l Treas.
    Emps. Union v. Von Raab, 
    489 U.S. 656
    , 667-68 (1989), laying out
    the various considerations to be taken into account when assessing
    administrative search policies (including gravity of public
    concerns, how the search advances the public interest, and the
    degree of interference with individual liberty), and collecting
    cases outlining variations on this detailed analysis). Here, the
    government conceded that the Order itself is not even in this
    record. All we have to go on to assess the validity of the notion
    that it's legitimate to use this procedure to make an end-run
    around the unconstitutionality of a warrantless entry is the
    language of the procedure as described by Officer Murillo. And
    frankly, that description seems to undercut the government's
    - 12 -
    record, the one exception currently before us does not operate to
    excuse the unconstitutionality of the warrantless entry.
    So let's discuss exigent circumstances.          Recall that in
    this case, the magistrate judge determined (and the district court
    accepted) that the warrantless entry was permissible due to exigent
    circumstances, which we've described as "a fancy way of saying
    'there is an emergency or other urgent need.'"           Belsito Commc'ns,
    Inc. v. Decker, 
    845 F.3d 13
    , 19 n.4 (1st Cir. 2016) (quoting United
    States v. Allman, 
    336 F.3d 555
    , 557 (7th Cir. 2003) (Posner, J.,
    for the court)).       Generally, "a warrantless entry into a person's
    dwelling may be permitted if exigent circumstances arise," United
    States v. Samboy, 
    433 F.3d 154
    , 158 (1st Cir. 2005) (internal
    quotations omitted), and, in order to find exigent circumstances,
    "the   police   must    reasonably   believe   that    'there   is   such   a
    compelling necessity for immediate action as will not brook the
    delay of obtaining a warrant,'"       
    id. (quoting Fletcher
    v. Town of
    Clinton, 
    196 F.3d 41
    , 49 (1st Cir. 1999)).            We've explained that
    "[t]he exigent circumstances doctrine reflects an understanding
    and appreciation of how events occur in the real world," Almonte-
    position anyway since it instructs that the person in question be
    disarmed -- here, given that the facts revolve around the officers'
    entry into the house to seize Rodríguez's service weapon, it
    clearly is undisputed that Rodríguez didn't have the gun on him at
    the time of the warrantless entry. All of this to say, on this
    record, we reject any argument that General Order No. 2006-4 serves
    as a means to enter a house without a warrant.
    - 13 -
    
    Báez, 857 F.3d at 31
    , observing that "[p]olice officers are often
    forced to make split-second judgments -- in circumstances that are
    tense, uncertain, and rapidly evolving," 
    id. (quoting Kentucky
    v.
    King, 
    563 U.S. 452
    , 466 (2011)).         To that end, we have indicated
    that the "best examples" of exigent circumstances include "hot
    pursuit of a felon, imminent destruction or removal of evidence,
    the threatened escape by a suspect, or imminent threat to the life
    or   safety    of   the   public,   police   officers,   or   a   person   in
    residence."     Bilida v. McCleod, 
    211 F.3d 166
    , 171 (1st Cir. 2000).
    Here, the lower court found that Rodríguez's case was
    "most similar to the final category" listed above, saying the
    exigency was that the police needed to "secur[e] the weapon they
    knew was inside."     In so reasoning, the magistrate judge relied on
    some non-controlling cases to support the conclusion that the
    officers didn't have to wait outside while Rodríguez retrieved the
    gun, and people being inside the house along with the gun justified
    a warrantless entry.        See United States v. Shannon, 
    21 F.3d 77
    (5th Cir. 1994); United States v. Guarente, 
    810 F. Supp. 350
    (D.
    Me. 1993); United States v. Rodriguez, 
    503 F. Supp. 15
    (D.P.R.
    1980). In particular, the magistrate judge leaned on United States
    v. Zetterman, No. CR-09-54-B-W, 
    2009 WL 3831388
    (D. Me. Nov. 16,
    2009), report and recommendation adopted, No. CR-09-54-B-W, 
    2010 WL 147805
    (D. Me. Jan. 11, 2010), to support his conclusion that
    the exigent circumstance was a gun being inside the house, and
    - 14 -
    that exigency entitled the officers to warrantlessly "enter the
    home for the limited purpose of retrieving the firearm."
    The government tells us this is supportable.                      Indeed,
    the government agrees with the exigency justification below as a
    baseline,9        and,    by   way    of   explanation,       offers       the    following
    reasoning:         the police were compelled to go to Rodríguez's house
    to execute his arrest pursuant to General Order No. 2006-4; that
    same protocol required them to seize Rodríguez's gun; they knew
    his gun was inside the house; they also knew Rodríguez was "well
    versed      in    the    use   of    firearms";       and   this   culminates       in   the
    conclusion that exigent circumstances existed and "any reasonable
    arresting officer with knowledge that the suspect has a firearm
    would not idly stand by at the front door and let the unaccompanied
    suspect retrieve a dangerous weapon."                   In support, the government
    points to United States v. Lopez, 
    989 F.2d 24
    , 27 (1st Cir. 1993),
    where       we   upheld    a    search     for    a    weapon      under    the    exigent
    circumstances exception because the search was "proportionate
    9
    In discussing the government's position on exigency, by
    the way, we are mindful of the fact that the government has the
    burden of proof when it comes to demonstrating exigent
    circumstances. See, e.g., 
    Samboy, 433 F.3d at 158
    . This is a
    problematic logistical reality on these facts since the government
    didn't raise exigency below to justify the warrantless entry (the
    lower court did that on its own), and therefore the government
    hadn't introduced evidence to support the officers' supposed
    belief that exigent circumstances were afoot -- or their reliance
    on any such exigency to enter the house.       Ultimately, as will
    become apparent from our analysis, this burden hasn't been carried.
    - 15 -
    . . . , limited in its range, [and] specific in its object."                 
    Id. at 27.
    But, as Rodríguez counters, the government's position,
    like the lower court's before it, is unsupported by our case law.
    Lopez, for instance, differs from Rodríguez's case in a few
    critical ways that undercut any reliance on it.                  In Lopez, a
    cocaine dealer had recently threatened his victim on-scene with a
    sawed-off shotgun (someone called the police and reported as much),
    and the victim was still there when the police 
    arrived. 989 F.2d at 25
    .    The police saw and pursued a person fleeing the scene, who
    turned out to be the defendant, Lopez (an associate of the shotgun-
    wielding   dealer   and    a    self-described     authorized   user    of   the
    apartment in which the threat occurred), believing at the time
    that Lopez did the threatening (as opposed to his associate, the
    cocaine dealer).    
    Id. We made
    it clear there -- in what we called
    a close case, 
    id. at 26
    -- that those factors played central roles
    in our conclusion, especially as to the use and whereabouts of the
    firearm at issue:       "[t]he most important element [was] that the
    police had reason to believe that [the defendant] had a sawed-off
    shotgun nearby, which had been used only shortly before to threaten
    [the victim]," 
    id. Here, Rodríguez
    had threatened (in a generic sense) his
    victim,    yes,   but     not    with   a    gun   and   not    face-to-face.
    Additionally, he was not armed at any point during his encounter
    - 16 -
    with his fellow officers, nor had he given the officers any
    indication that he would turn violent and become a danger to them.
    Indeed, they never handcuffed him nor did a protective sweep,
    apparently never in fear for their safety as Rodríguez remained
    passive, nor did they ever express any concern that some other
    resident of the house might access the gun to hide or misuse it.
    Moreover, Rodríguez did not flee when the officers showed up, but
    instead was, by the officers' own accounts, fully cooperative.
    And although the officers in Rodríguez's case knew there was a gun
    "nearby,"10 as was the case in Lopez, this gun was not alleged to
    have played a role in the recent commission of a violent crime
    against a victim who was still on-scene.11     The fact that the
    officers knew a gun was in the house, without more, is not
    10  Another thing:    at oral argument, this court queried
    whether    the     protocol-says-we-had-to-enter-to-seize-the-gun
    rationale would be affected at all if Rodríguez -- arrested,
    unarmed, under control, but not offering consent to enter -- had
    been, say, two miles from the house rather than just outside it.
    The government conceded that the two-mile scenario would require
    a warrant to enter the house to retrieve the gun. And although
    the government later tried to walk back that concession (without
    offering any reasoning to explain the change of heart), on these
    facts, we see no difference between an unarmed, unthreatening
    Rodríguez being two miles away or ten yards away -- neither
    undercuts the need for a warrant.
    11  Officers in Lopez also were concerned with securing the
    scene (a multi-tenant building) and making sure no other
    potentially violent actors were lurking 
    about. 989 F.2d at 26
    ,
    27. Here, no one ever suggests that officers believed there might
    be others in the house who posed such a threat that exigency
    justified their warrantless entry.
    - 17 -
    sufficient        under     our     precedent     to     demonstrate       exigent
    circumstances.12
    With respect to the government's suggestion that it
    would be "ludicrous" to let Rodríguez go get the gun so the
    officers could carry out their mission of seizing it, all we can
    say is that, on these facts, the perceived ludicrousness of a
    course of action does not, on its own, create an exigency.                      And,
    although the government points to the inconveniences associated
    with the logistics of getting a warrant, no one has asserted that
    securing a warrant was not an option or that those inconveniences
    would in any way outweigh Rodríguez's Fourth Amendment interests.
    In   the     end,    this   particular    record,    viewed   in    its
    totality, does not reflect one of "those crisis situations when
    there is compelling need for official action and no time to secure
    a warrant."       United States v. Irizarry, 
    673 F.2d 554
    , 557 (1st
    Cir. 1982); see also 
    Samboy, 433 F.3d at 156-57
    .                 No emergency, no
    urgency, no actual or threatened violence or gun violence, no armed
    suspects, no fleeing, no split-second decisions by police in tense
    moments, no legal reason not to get a warrant.                    At bottom, the
    12 Like Lopez, the cases cited in the R&R in support of the
    exigency analysis and conclusion are distinguishable from the
    facts here in a variety of fundamental ways -- for starters, unlike
    in those cases, there was no allegation of physical violence here,
    and certainly not one involving a gun. Those cases simply do not
    move the needle for us, and we need say no more.
    - 18 -
    facts   of    this   case    simply    do   not    square   with    our    exigent-
    circumstances case law, and it was error to deny the motion to
    suppress on this basis.        See generally, Almonte-
    Báez, 857 F.3d at 31
    ; 
    Decker, 845 F.3d at 19
    n.4; 
    Samboy, 433 F.3d at 156-57
    .
    Next Steps
    Because we conclude that the entry into the home on the
    basis of exigency was unconstitutional, that cannot serve as
    justification for the search and seizure that followed.                   But there
    is more.       Recall that consent would be another way around the
    warrantless entry problem. Indeed, before the lower court, consent
    was the government's original and sole theory explaining why the
    warrantless entry was not unconstitutional.                   But the district
    court, by way of the R&R, explicitly opted to bypass that argument.
    As such, there is no consent determination (whether consent to
    enter   was    given   and   whether    that      consent   could   serve    as   an
    independent basis for the officers' entry) for our review, and the
    record in its current state is not sufficient to permit us to
    consider and decide the issue in the first instance.                      We do not
    think it appropriate to hold this omission against the government;
    the government squarely raised consent as its justification for
    the entry and Rodríguez defended on that ground.
    Accordingly, we remand this case to the district court
    to make factual findings and determine whether consent to the entry
    was given.     See, e.g., United States v. Gandia, 
    424 F.3d 255
    , 265
    - 19 -
    (2d Cir. 2005) (taking a similar approach).   This panel retains
    jurisdiction over this matter.
    - 20 -