United States v. Joseph Yengel, Jr. , 711 F.3d 392 ( 2013 )


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  •                        PUBLISHED
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,             
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v.                          No. 12-4317
    JOSEPH ROBERT YENGEL, JR.,
    Defendant-Appellee.
    
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Eastern District of Virginia, at Newport News.
    Henry Coke Morgan, Jr., Senior District Judge.
    (4:12-cr-00011-HCM-FBS-1)
    Argued: October 23, 2012
    Decided: February 15, 2013
    Before TRAXLER, Chief Judge, and WYNN and
    THACKER, Circuit Judges.
    Affirmed by published opinion. Judge Thacker wrote the
    opinion, in which Chief Judge Traxler and Judge Wynn
    joined.
    COUNSEL
    ARGUED: Richard Daniel Cooke, OFFICE OF THE
    UNITED STATES ATTORNEY, Richmond, Virginia, for
    Appellant. Caroline Swift Platt, OFFICE OF THE FEDERAL
    2                  UNITED STATES v. YENGEL
    PUBLIC DEFENDER, Alexandria, Virginia, for Appellee.
    ON BRIEF: Neil H. MacBride, United States Attorney,
    Alexandria, Virginia, for Appellant. Michael S. Nachmanoff,
    Federal Public Defender, Alexandria, Virginia, Rodolfo
    Cejas, II, Assistant Federal Public Defender, Patrick L. Bry-
    ant, Appellate Attorney, OFFICE OF THE FEDERAL PUB-
    LIC DEFENDER, Norfolk, Virginia, for Appellee.
    OPINION
    THACKER, Circuit Judge:
    The instant case requires this court to consider whether the
    district court properly excluded evidence gained from a war-
    rantless search. In so doing, we must address whether it was
    reasonable for an officer to enter a locked closet without a
    search warrant after responding to an armed domestic dispute,
    arresting the suspect and removing him from the residence,
    and gaining information that indicated a grenade may have
    been present in the closet. Based on the objective facts avail-
    able to the officer at the time of the search, we agree with the
    district court and conclude exigent circumstances did not exist
    to justify the warrantless search in this case. Thus, the evi-
    dence obtained from such search was properly excluded.
    I.
    The relevant facts are undisputed by the parties. In the late
    afternoon of December 31, 2011, Sergeant Brian Staton
    responded to a call regarding a domestic assault at the home
    of Joseph Robert Yengel, Jr. ("Yengel"). The 911 dispatcher
    informed Sergeant Staton that a domestic dispute had erupted
    between Yengel and his wife. Sergeant Staton also learned
    that Mrs. Yengel had vacated the residence, and Yengel was
    potentially armed and threatening to shoot law enforcement
    personnel.
    UNITED STATES v. YENGEL                             3
    At around 4:00 p.m., Officer J.M. Slodysko was the first to
    arrive on the scene. The Yengels’ two-story home featured a
    walk-up front porch and was located in a dense residential
    neighborhood, with very little space separating adjacent
    homes. Upon his arrival, Officer Slodysko observed that Yen-
    gel was "extremely upset." J.A. 118.1 Officer Slodysko was,
    however, able to calm Yengel, and to persuade him to come
    out of the residence onto the front porch, unarmed. Shortly
    thereafter, when Sergeant Staton arrived on the scene, Yengel
    was seated on the top step of the front porch, "agitated and
    emotional," but unarmed.2 J.A. 57–58, 124. The officers then
    further calmed Yengel, arrested him, and removed him from
    the scene.
    While still at the scene, Sergeant Staton then interviewed
    Mrs. Yengel and Yengel’s mother, Karol Yengel. During the
    interviews, Sergeant Staton learned Yengel kept a large num-
    ber of firearms and a "grenade" inside the house. Sergeant
    Staton also learned that Mrs. Yengel’s young son was sleep-
    ing in one of the upstairs bedrooms. Upon learning of the pos-
    sible existence of a "grenade," Sergeant Staton did not
    immediately call for the assistance of explosive experts, nor
    did he evacuate the area. Rather, Sergeant Staton asked Mrs.
    Yengel to show him where the alleged grenade was kept.
    Mrs. Yengel directed Sergeant Staton into the upstairs mas-
    ter bedroom. There, she collected a variety of firearms which
    were strewn about the bedroom, placed the firearms on the
    bed, and requested that Sergeant Staton remove them. She
    1
    Citations to the "J.A." refer to the Joint Appendix filed by the parties
    in this appeal.
    2
    The parties dispute Yengel’s positioning upon Sergeant Staton’s
    arrival. Sergeant Staton indicated that when he arrived, Yengel was sitting
    on the top stair leading up to the front porch. J.A. 57. Yengel contends that
    he was sitting in a chair on the front porch. Appellee’s Br. 4. We do not
    find the district court’s factual finding that Yengel was sitting on the top
    step to be clearly erroneous, nor do we find this factual dispute material
    to our analysis.
    4                     UNITED STATES v. YENGEL
    said nothing further at that point about the existence or
    removal of the alleged grenade. Therefore, Sergeant Staton
    reiterated his request to locate the "grenade," and Mrs. Yengel
    directed him to a nearby guest bedroom located at the end of
    the upstairs hallway, directly next to the bedroom in which
    her young son was sleeping.3 Mrs. Yengel led Sergeant Staton
    to a closet inside the guest bedroom that was locked with a
    combination keypad and thumbprint scanner. Mrs. Yengel
    informed Sergeant Staton that she did not know the combina-
    tion to the lock and did not have access to the closet, but told
    him the "grenade" was kept inside. She then gave Sergeant
    Staton permission to "kick the door open" and told him to "do
    whatever you need to do to get in there." J.A. 64.
    At this point, Sergeant Staton still did not notify explosive
    experts, did not evacuate the house or nearby homes, did not
    remove the sleeping child from the room located directly next
    to the room where the "grenade" was allegedly stored, and did
    not secure a search warrant. Instead, he simply pried open the
    closet with a screwdriver.
    Once inside the closet, Sergeant Staton identified a variety
    of military equipment, including two gun safes, camouflage,
    and other weapons. Sergeant Staton also identified what he
    thought to be a military ammunition canister that he believed
    might contain the possible grenade.
    After the warrantless entry into the closet, Sergeant Staton
    ordered an evacuation of the house, which at the time still
    included Mrs. Yengel’s young son, as well as an evacuation
    of the surrounding residences. At approximately 6:25 p.m., he
    also notified the James City County Fire Marshal’s office, and
    3
    While there is some ambiguity in the record as to whether the bedroom
    in which the child was sleeping was adjacent to, or opposite from, the
    guest bedroom containing the locked closet, it is undisputed — and salient
    to our analysis here — that his room was in very close proximity to the
    guest bedroom, and we will refer to the layout of the house in such terms.
    UNITED STATES v. YENGEL                   5
    the Naval Weapons Station, requesting the assistance of its
    Explosive Ordnance Disposal ("EOD") team. At around 7:00
    p.m., Investigator Kendall Driscoll of the James City County
    Fire Marshal’s office arrived on the scene, and began gather-
    ing further information from Mrs. Yengel by telephone, as she
    had by then been removed from the scene. Mrs. Yengel
    informed Investigator Driscoll that she had seen her husband
    place a "grenade" — four inches by two inches, dark green in
    color, with a pin in the top — into the closet two years prior.
    Shortly thereafter, around 7:30 p.m., the EOD team arrived
    and searched the open closet. Once inside the closet, the EOD
    team found a backpack containing not a grenade, but a one
    pound container of smokeless shotgun powder and a partially
    assembled explosive device attached to a kitchen timer. Law
    enforcement had been on the scene approximately three and
    a half hours at this point.
    On February 14, 2012, Yengel was charged with possession
    of an unregistered firearm, in violation of 
    26 U.S.C. §§ 5861
    and 5845, that is, "a combination of parts designed and
    intended for use in converting a device into a destructive
    device, not registered to him in the National Firearms Regis-
    tration and Transfer Record." J.A. 8. On March 8, 2012, Yen-
    gel filed a motion to suppress evidence gained from the
    warrantless search of the locked closet.
    On March 27, 2012, the district court conducted a hearing
    to consider Yengel’s motion. The district court heard testi-
    mony from Yengel, Sergeant Staton, and Investigator Dris-
    coll. The district court also admitted as exhibits a picture of
    a door lock similar to the one used by Yengel, Officer Slo-
    dysko’s report, and pictures of the explosive device and shot-
    gun powder recovered from the closet.
    The district court granted Yengel’s motion to suppress from
    the bench and stated its reasoning by order dated April 3,
    2012. The district court concluded the warrantless search did
    not fall into one of the narrow and well-delineated exceptions
    6                   UNITED STATES v. YENGEL
    to the warrant requirement, and, therefore, violated the Fourth
    Amendment. Specifically, the district court determined that
    neither Mrs. Yengel’s consent to the search, nor exigent cir-
    cumstances justified the warrantless search. The Government
    filed a motion for reconsideration on April 13, 2012, which
    the district court subsequently denied. On April 25, 2012, the
    Government filed a timely notice of appeal with this court.
    II.
    On appeal, the Government argues only that the district
    court erred in concluding the warrantless search of the closet
    was not justified by exigent circumstances. When considering
    an appeal of a motion to suppress, we review the district
    court’s factual findings for clear error, and its legal determina-
    tions de novo. United States v. Hill, 
    649 F.3d 258
    , 262 (4th
    Cir. 2011).
    III.
    The most basic principle of Fourth Amendment jurispru-
    dence — and the genesis of our analysis here — is that war-
    rantless searches and seizures inside a home are
    presumptively unconstitutional. Brigham City v. Stuart, 
    547 U.S. 398
    , 403 (2006). "Nevertheless, because the ultimate
    touchstone of the Fourth Amendment is ‘reasonableness,’ the
    warrant requirement is subject to certain exceptions." 
    Id.
     (cit-
    ing Flippo v. West Virginia, 
    528 U.S. 11
    , 13 (1999) (per
    curiam)). Such reasonableness exceptions, however, must be
    narrow and well-delineated in order to retain their constitu-
    tional character. Flippo, 
    528 U.S. at
    13 (citing Katz v. United
    States, 
    389 U.S. 347
    , 357 (1967)). One such exception is
    when exigent circumstances justify the warrantless entry of a
    home. See Mincey v. Arizona, 
    437 U.S. 385
    , 392–94 (1978).
    The rationale underpinning the exigent circumstances doctrine
    is that when faced with an immediate and credible threat or
    danger, it is inherently reasonable to permit police to act with-
    out a warrant.
    UNITED STATES v. YENGEL                    7
    A.
    The Supreme Court has recognized a variety of specific cir-
    cumstances that may constitute an exigency sufficient to jus-
    tify the warrantless entry and search of private property.
    These circumstances have included when officers must enter
    to fight an on-going fire, prevent the destruction of evidence,
    or continue in "hot pursuit" of a fleeing suspect. Brigham
    City, 
    547 U.S. at
    403 (citing Michigan v. Tyler, 
    436 U.S. 499
    ,
    509 (1978); Ker v. California, 
    374 U.S. 23
    , 40 (1963) (plural-
    ity opinion); and United States v. Santana, 
    427 U.S. 38
    , 42,
    43 (1976)). In addition to these well-established exigencies,
    the Supreme Court and this Circuit have held that more gen-
    eral "emergencies," if enveloped by a sufficient level of
    urgency, may also constitute an exigency and justify a war-
    rantless entry and search. See generally, Brigham City, 
    547 U.S. at 403
    ; United States v. Hill, 
    649 F.3d 258
    , 265 (4th Cir.
    2011).
    Under this more general emergency-as-exigency approach,
    in order for a warrantless search to pass constitutional muster,
    "the person making entry must have had an objectively rea-
    sonable belief that an emergency existed that required imme-
    diate entry to render assistance or prevent harm to persons or
    property within." United States v. Moss, 
    963 F.2d 673
    , 678
    (4th Cir. 1992). An objectively reasonable belief must be
    based on specific articulable facts and reasonable inferences
    that could have been drawn therefrom. See Mora v. City of
    Gaithersburg, 
    519 F.3d 216
    , 224 (4th Cir. 2008) (citing Terry
    v. Ohio, 
    392 U.S. 1
    , 21 (1968)).
    Regardless of the particular exigency being invoked, we
    have repeatedly found the non-exhaustive list of factors first
    provided in United States v. Turner, 
    650 F.2d 526
    , 528 (4th
    Cir. 1981), to be helpful in determining whether an exigency
    reasonably justified a warrantless search. Hill, 
    649 F.3d at 265
    . The Turner factors include:
    8                  UNITED STATES v. YENGEL
    (1) the degree of urgency involved and the amount
    of time necessary to obtain a warrant; (2) the offi-
    cers’ reasonable belief that the contraband is about
    to be removed or destroyed; (3) the possibility of
    danger to police guarding the site; (4) information
    indicating the possessors of the contraband are aware
    that the police are on their trail; and (5) the ready
    destructibility of the contraband.
    
    650 F.2d at 528
    .
    We have expanded upon this analytical framework in cer-
    tain circumstances. In Mora, we noted that the same Fourth
    Amendment principles which give rise to the exigent circum-
    stances justification for a warrantless search — namely the
    balancing of the governmental interest in a protective search
    with the individual interests at stake in the intrusion, viewed
    through the lens of objective reasonableness — also give rise
    to constitutionally permissible warrantless searches in what
    we referred to as the "preventive action" context. 19 F.3d at
    222. In Mora, we determined a warrantless search of a sus-
    pect’s luggage, van, and apartment was constitutional, based
    on the overwhelming need to prevent harm to the public
    where police had received a hotline tip that the suspect was
    intent on committing mass murder. Id. at 225–26. In so doing,
    we relied on the same Fourth Amendment principles we do
    here, and emphasized, "[a]s the likelihood, urgency, and mag-
    nitude of a threat increase, so does the justification for and
    scope of police preventive action." Id. at 224.
    With these principles in mind, we turn to their application
    in the present case.
    B.
    The Government argues that the possible threat of a gre-
    nade created exigent circumstances that, as in Mora, justified
    the search of Yengel’s closet as "preventive action." The dis-
    UNITED STATES v. YENGEL                            9
    trict court, however, found the objective facts of this case suf-
    ficiently distinct from Mora, and concluded that no
    emergency existed, and thus, no exigent circumstances
    existed, to justify a warrantless search under the guise of pre-
    ventive action. We agree.
    We conclude the objective circumstances discernible at the
    time Sergeant Staton entered the closet did not constitute an
    emergency such that a reasonable officer would have believed
    a preventive entry was warranted. In fact, Sergeant Staton’s
    own actions belie the Government’s argument. We find a
    number of facts highly persuasive.
    First, the information available to Sergeant Staton regard-
    ing the stable nature of the threat prior to the search indicated
    that the scope of any danger was quite limited.
    Mrs. Yengel informed Sergeant Staton only that there was
    a "grenade" inside the house, and provided no indication that
    there might be other, more unstable explosives, inside as well.
    Mrs. Yengel also provided no indication to Sergeant Staton as
    to when she had last seen the grenade that could support a
    conclusion the grenade was somehow "live" or could detonate
    at any moment.4 Indeed, even the presence of explosive mate-
    rials alone, while heightening the danger, would not automati-
    cally provide an exigent basis for a search. See United States
    v. Bonitz, 
    826 F.2d 954
    , 957 (10th Cir. 1987) (concluding no
    4
    In fact, as it turned out, Mrs. Yengel had not seen the purported gre-
    nade for two years prior to the warrantless entry into the closet. We note
    that Mrs. Yengel’s statement, that she had not seen the grenade in two
    years, would only further justify our determination that there was no exi-
    gency. This statement, however, only appears in Investigator Driscoll’s
    testimony. Investigator Driscoll did not have contact with Mrs. Yengel
    until after Sergeant Staton’s entry and search occurred. There is no indica-
    tion in the record that Mrs. Yengel informed Sergeant Staton, at the time
    he entered the closet, that she had not seen the grenade in two years, nor
    is there any indication that he asked her when she had last seen it. There-
    fore, we do not rely on this information in reaching our conclusion.
    10                  UNITED STATES v. YENGEL
    exigency existed where officers found cans of gun powder
    because "[s]tanding undisturbed, cans of gun powder are
    inert"). The presence of explosive materials must be tied to
    objective facts that sufficiently increase the likelihood,
    urgency, and magnitude of the threat to the level of an emer-
    gency. We find no clear error in the district court’s factual
    finding that a grenade is a stable, inert explosive device that
    typically requires human intervention to detonate and cause
    harm.
    In Bonitz, police officers viewed a can of black powder and
    a grenade-shaped paperweight atop a workbench. 
    Id.
     The
    Tenth Circuit determined that the presence of these materials,
    alone, did not create an exigency allowing police officers to
    conduct a warrantless search of the surrounding room. 
    Id.
     In
    this case, the Government argues that because the explosive
    device was not in plain view but rather hidden from view
    inside a closet, this created a level of uncertainty that was not
    present in Bonitz, and therefore required Sergeant Staton to
    confirm that there was, in fact, only a grenade present. This
    speculative rationale is too detached from the objective facts
    available to Sergeant Staton at the time of the search — spe-
    cifically that Mrs. Yengel had only told him that a "grenade"
    was present. Like the Tenth Circuit in Bonitz, we conclude
    that the possible existence of a stable, inert explosive device,
    without objective facts that increase the threat of danger, does
    not create an exigency to justify a warrantless search. 
    Id.
    ("Thus, the only immediate danger that existed was created by
    the officers themselves when they entered the secure area and
    began to handle these materials.").
    Second, the immobile and inaccessible location of the
    threat further diminished the scope of any possible danger.
    Mrs. Yengel informed Sergeant Staton that the "grenade" was
    inside a locked closet — a closet to which neither she, nor
    anyone else other than Yengel, had ready access. Once Yen-
    gel was arrested and removed from the scene, the threat that
    someone might access the closet and disturb a stable grenade
    UNITED STATES v. YENGEL                  11
    contained therein dissipated even further. Accordingly, these
    facts weigh against concluding under the first, second, third,
    and fifth Turner factors that exigent circumstances were pres-
    ent: the facts did not establish a sufficient degree of urgency
    and an inability to secure a warrant, a reasonable belief that
    contraband could be removed or destroyed, danger to police
    guarding the site, or the ready destructibility of contraband.
    
    650 F.2d at 528
    .
    Finally, the fact that no officers on the scene sought to
    evacuate the nearby residences, or, in particular, to evacuate
    Mrs. Yengel’s young son who was sleeping in the room
    directly next to the alleged grenade provides stark evidence
    that a reasonable police officer would not — and did not —
    believe an emergency was on-going, such as would justify a
    warrantless entry.
    In United States v. Whitehorn, 
    813 F.2d 646
     (4th Cir.
    1987), we agreed with the district court’s determination that
    exigent circumstances did not justify FBI agents’ protective
    bomb sweep where there was "no evidence that anyone was
    evacuated from the building or warned of the potential dan-
    ger, or that the agents had otherwise prepared for the risk of
    an exploding bomb." 
    813 F.2d at 649
     (internal quotation
    marks omitted). Similarly, the Tenth Circuit in Bonitz found
    the police’s failure to evacuate the arrestee’s parents before
    conducting their search equally indicative of the fact that no
    exigency existed. 
    826 F.2d at 957
     ("[T]he officers made no
    attempt to remove defendant’s parents from the home even
    though they now have the audacity to claim that the danger
    was such to threaten a restaurant some distance away."). In
    noting that Mrs. Yengel’s son was not immediately evacuated
    from the scene, we are cognizant of the principle that "judges
    should be cautious about second-guessing a police officer’s
    assessment, made on the scene, of the danger presented by a
    particular situation." Ryburn v. Huff, 
    132 S. Ct. 987
    , 991–92
    (2012). Here, however, as in Whitehorn, the objective actions
    of the officers speak for themselves.
    12                  UNITED STATES v. YENGEL
    The stable nature of the threat, the immobile and inaccessi-
    ble location of the threat, and the failure by police officers on
    site to view the threat as serious enough to warrant evacuation
    of a nearby child, alone, support our conclusion under the
    Turner factors that no exigency existed in this case.
    The Government’s argument to the contrary relies heavily
    on attempting to draw similarities between this case and
    Mora. In Mora, we permitted a warrantless search by police
    of locked containers after the suspect, who had threatened
    mass murder, had been detained and police officers were
    faced with the threat of a possible explosive device, hostage,
    or confederate. We find, however, several important distinc-
    tions between this case and Mora more compelling.
    Key to our holding in Mora was that the police officers’
    arrival at the scene was predicated upon precise, articulable
    information that the suspect was about to commit mass mur-
    der — a crime of extraordinary consequence. Here, police
    officers were responding to a report of an armed domestic
    assault, which, although certainly no less deplorable, is not
    accompanied by the same gravity of harm as a mass killing.
    The heightened potential in Mora for deliberate and massive
    public harm increased the exigency and distinguishes it from
    the present case.
    Further, in determining the search in Mora constitutional,
    we emphasized:
    [w]hen police arrived at Mora’s apartment and hand-
    cuffed him, they did not and could not fully know
    the dimensions of the threat they faced. . . . Mora
    might have had a bomb—not an unprecedented thing
    for men in his state of mind. . . . Mora might have
    taken hostage the girlfriend who, police knew, had
    recently broken up with him. Or Mora might have
    had a confederate.
    UNITED STATES v. YENGEL                   13
    
    519 F.3d at 226
    . Thus, in Mora, police officers were con-
    cerned about unknown variables that could reasonably accom-
    pany a threat of mass murder — bombs, accomplices, and
    hostages — based on the information they had at the time. In
    particular, police had been unable to locate Mora’s ex-
    girlfriend, and feared that any attempt at mass murder could
    reasonably involve accomplices or explosives. There is no
    similar indication here that the domestic assault, in the context
    of the facts as they unfolded, would carry with it these same
    dangers. In fact, once Yengel was arrested and Sergeant Sta-
    ton was informed of the type of explosive thought to be pres-
    ent, and that it was contained in a secure location, the
    possibility of such unknown threats diminished.
    The Government argues other facts available to Sergeant
    Staton — including the possible existence of a "grenade," the
    layperson’s understanding of explosives, the presence of a
    high number of firearms, and Yengel’s earlier threats to harm
    police personnel — when coupled with the uncertainty of
    what lay behind the closet door, supported preventive police
    action to fully determine the scope of the risk he faced. While
    we recognize preventive action may well be justified in the
    face of an exigency, we conclude the factual circumstances of
    this case simply do not rise to that level. Inevitably, every
    police interaction with the public will carry with it an appre-
    hension of the unknown; but not every interaction presents an
    emergency requiring preventive action. Rather, when uncer-
    tainty is tethered to objective facts that increase the likeli-
    hood, urgency, and magnitude of a threat, an emergency may
    be present and preventive action may be warranted. Where, as
    here, however, the objective facts decrease the likelihood,
    urgency, and magnitude of a threat, any uncertainty is like-
    wise tempered, and the exigency dissipates.
    In the end, the Fourth Amendment’s ultimate touchstone of
    objective reasonableness must be our guide. In this case, we
    conclude the objective facts at the time of the forcible war-
    14                    UNITED STATES v. YENGEL
    rantless entry into the locked closet were insufficient to justify
    a reasonable belief that an exigency existed.
    IV.
    Accordingly, we agree with the district court’s well-
    reasoned opinion that the degree of urgency, and the other
    factors established in United States v. Turner, 
    650 F.2d 526
    ,
    528 (4th Cir. 1981), did not rise to a level sufficient to create
    an exigency and warrant the kind of preventive police action
    we approved in Mora v. City of Gaithersburg, 
    519 F.3d 216
    (4th Cir. 2008). We therefore conclude that the warrantless
    search in this case was unconstitutional, and the evidence
    gained therefrom rightfully suppressed.
    For the aforementioned reasons, the district court’s order is
    AFFIRMED.