Michael Ball v. United States , 185 A.3d 21 ( 2018 )


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    DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA COURT OF APPEALS
    No. 16-CF-729
    MICHAEL C. BALL, APPELLANT,
    v.
    UNITED STATES, APPELLEE.
    Appeal from the Superior Court
    of the District of Columbia
    (CF2-18913-13)
    (Hon. Patricia A. Broderick, Trial Judge)
    (Argued February 1, 2018                                    Decided May 24, 2018)
    Sicilia C. Englert for appellant.
    Chimnomnso N. Kalu, Assistant United States Attorney, with whom
    Channing D. Phillips, United States Attorney at the time the brief was filed,
    Elizabeth Trosman, Suzanne Grealy Curt, Jennifer Fischer, and Anwar Graves,
    Assistant United States Attorneys, were on the brief for appellee.
    Before GLICKMAN and EASTERLY, Associate Judges, and OKUN, Associate
    Judge, Superior Court of the District of Columbia.
    Opinion for the court by Associate Judge OKUN.
    Dissenting opinion by Associate Judge EASTERLY at page 20.
    
    Sitting by designation pursuant to D.C. Code § 11-707 (a) (2012 Repl.).
    2
    OKUN, Associate Judge, Superior Court of the District of Columbia: In this
    case, the police went to an apartment building at approximately 5 a.m. after
    receiving a radio run for an assault in progress. When the police arrived at the
    apartment building, they were met by a resident who told the police that he had
    called 911 because he heard yelling and screaming coming from an apartment on
    the second floor. The police went to the second floor of the apartment building
    and heard yelling and screaming coming from an apartment on that floor, which
    sounded like a distressed female yelling as if she were in pain or struggling. The
    police knocked on the door and approximately one to three minutes later, a woman
    who looked panicked and concerned answered the door. The woman opened the
    door halfway, but did not respond to the police officer‘s questions about what was
    happening inside the apartment.       The woman then looked back inside the
    apartment and opened the door, after which the police entered the apartment.
    The trial judge found that exigent circumstances justified the police officers‘
    entry into the apartment without a warrant, and denied appellant‘s motion to
    suppress the evidence they seized after entering the apartment. Although the issue
    is a close one, we agree that exigent circumstances justified the warrantless entry
    into the apartment and the subsequent seizure of evidence. Accordingly, for the
    reasons set forth more fully below, we affirm.
    3
    I.
    1
    Viewed in the light most favorable to the trial court‘s ruling,              the
    government‘s evidence at the suppression hearing showed the following.             On
    October 26, 2013, at approximately 5 a.m., the police received a radio run for an
    assault in progress at 1626 28th Street, SE, Apartment 3. Officers Jeremy Kniseley
    and Domonick Davis responded to that location, where they were met at the front
    door of the building by a resident who told the police that he had called 911
    because he heard yelling and screaming coming from Apartment 3 on the second
    floor of the building. 2 The police went to Apartment 3 and knocked on the door,
    but as they were knocking on the door of Apartment 3, they heard yelling and
    screaming coming from Apartment 4. More specifically, Officer Kniseley testified
    that he heard a ―distressed female‖ ―yelling as if she was in pain or struggling‖ and
    Officer Davis testified that he heard a lot of ―commotion and going on‖ inside the
    apartment. In addition, the 911 caller, who had followed the police halfway up the
    steps to the second floor landing, pointed to Apartment 4 as the officers heard
    yelling and screaming coming from that apartment.
    1
    See, e.g., Wade v. United States, 
    173 A.3d 87
    , 90 (D.C. 2017).
    2
    The apartment building is a two story building, with two apartments on the
    first floor (Apartments 1 and 2) and two apartments on the second floor
    (Apartments 3 and 4).
    4
    Officer Kniseley then knocked several times on the front door of Apartment
    4, identified himself as a police officer, and requested that the occupants open the
    door. After a period of one to three minutes had elapsed, a woman opened the
    front door halfway. According to Officer Kniseley, this woman was partially
    dressed and appeared ―somewhat panicked and concerned,‖ while Officer Davis
    testified that the woman was wearing a shirt and looked ―more like in a daze.‖ The
    officers asked the woman what was happening inside the apartment, but the
    woman did not respond and instead looked back into the apartment and then fully
    opened the door.
    After the woman fully opened the door, the officers observed another
    woman inside the apartment, who appeared to be in the process of getting dressed.
    Officer Kniseley testified that he thought ―some sort of sexual assault‖ had been
    occurring inside the apartment, based on the ―yelling and screaming, and what [he]
    thought was distress,‖ and based on his observations of the two partially dressed
    women inside the apartment.
    After observing these two women and not receiving any responses to their
    questions, the officers entered the apartment and observed appellant, with his body
    5
    partially obscured behind a wall.3 The police requested that appellant show his
    hands, but appellant refused to do so, and instead kept looking back towards the
    couch in the living room and then began reaching towards the couch. After the
    officers observed appellant reach towards the couch, Officer Davis wrestled
    appellant to the ground and both officers were able to handcuff him after a struggle
    that lasted one to two minutes. During the struggle, appellant repeatedly yelled
    ―This is my house. I live here. This is my house.‖ The couch in the living room
    moved from the wall as the result of this struggle, and when the officers stood up
    after handcuffing appellant, they observed a black handgun lying behind the couch.
    Officer Kniseley then recovered the gun, which the officer believed was loaded
    because it was ―weighted‖ and ―heavy.‖
    3
    The record is not entirely clear as to appellant‘s location when the officers
    first observed him. Officer Kniseley testified that appellant was standing in the
    hallway behind the corner of a wall, and ―repeatedly peeking out and retreating
    back and forth behind that corner,‖ while Officer Davis testified that appellant was
    standing in the kitchen area ―shielded by a wall‖ and that he could only see
    appellant‘s head and his right arm. The record also is not clear whether the
    officers observed appellant before they entered the apartment. Officer Davis
    testified that he saw appellant about ten seconds after he entered the apartment,
    while Officer Kniseley testified that he saw appellant before he entered the
    apartment, even though he testified that Officer Davis entered the apartment first.
    The trial court did not address this conflict in the testimony and we need not
    address this conflict either, and instead will assume, arguendo, that the police did
    not see appellant until after they entered the apartment.
    6
    After recovering the handgun, the police conducted a search of the
    remainder of the apartment to ensure their safety and the safety of the occupants.
    During this search, the police recovered one bag of marijuana from the top of a
    refrigerator, one bag of marijuana from a television stand in the living room, and a
    grinder with traces of marijuana on top of the couch. Appellant subsequently was
    charged with unlawful possession of a firearm, in violation of D.C. Code § 22-
    4503 (a)(1) (2012 Repl.), possession of an unregistered firearm, in violation of
    D.C. Code § 7-2502.01 (a) (2012 Repl.), unlawful possession of ammunition, in
    violation of D.C. Code § 7-2506.01 (a), unlawful possession of a controlled
    substance (marijuana), in violation of D.C. Code § 48-904.01 (d) (2012 Repl.), and
    unlawful possession of drug paraphernalia, in violation of D.C. Code § 48-1103
    (a).
    Appellant filed a motion to suppress the evidence seized from his apartment,
    arguing that the evidence should be suppressed because the police entered his
    apartment without a warrant and without his consent. The government filed an
    opposition in which it argued that the police did not need a warrant to enter
    appellant‘s apartment because: (1) they were responding to an emergency situation
    in which they reasonably believed that the occupants in the apartment needed their
    assistance; and (2) the woman who answered the door had consented to the search.
    7
    The trial court conducted a hearing on appellant‘s motion to suppress the evidence
    seized from his apartment, at which both Officers Kniseley and Davis testified. At
    the conclusion of the hearing, the trial court denied appellant‘s motion, stating that
    she credited the testimony of the officers and finding that exigent circumstances
    justified the officers‘ warrantless entry into appellant‘s apartment and subsequent
    seizure of evidence. 4
    At appellant‘s first trial, the jury acquitted appellant of unlawful possession
    of drug paraphernalia and could not reach a unanimous verdict as to the other
    charges.   The government subsequently dismissed the unlawful possession of
    marijuana charge prior to appellant‘s second trial.     At the second trial, the jury
    convicted appellant of all three gun charges, and this appeal followed.
    II.
    Appellant argues on appeal that the trial court erred in denying his motion to
    suppress evidence because there were no exigent circumstances justifying a
    warrantless search, and because appellant did not consent to a search of the
    4
    The trial judge did not address the government‘s alternative argument that
    the woman who answered the apartment door had consented to a search of the
    apartment.
    8
    apartment. We need not address appellant‘s consent argument, because we find
    that exigent circumstances justified the warrantless search. See, e.g., Oliver v.
    United States, 
    656 A.2d 1159
    , 1164 n.11 (D.C. 1995) (not addressing consent
    argument after finding that search was justified under exigent circumstances
    doctrine).5
    The Fourth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution ―permits an officer to enter
    a dwelling without a warrant if the officer has ‗an objectively reasonable basis for
    believing‘ that entry is necessary ‗to render emergency assistance to an injured
    occupant or to protect an occupant from imminent injury.‘‖        Evans v. United
    States, 
    122 A.3d 876
    , 881 (D.C. 2015) (quoting Brigham City, Utah v. Stuart, 
    547 U.S. 398
    , 403, 406 (2006)). This exception to the warrant requirement, known as
    the ―emergency aid exception,‖ does not depend on ―the seriousness of any crime
    [the officers] are investigating when the emergency arises,‖ and instead ―requires
    only ‗an objectively reasonable basis for believing‘ that ‗a person within [the
    dwelling] is in need of immediate aid.‘‖ Michigan v. Fisher, 
    558 U.S. 45
    , 48
    (2009) (quoting Brigham 
    City, 547 U.S. at 404-05
    ; Mincey v. Arizona, 
    437 U.S. 385
    , 392 (1978) (internal citations omitted)); see also 
    Fisher, 558 U.S. at 49
    (the
    5
    Appellant does not argue that the police could not properly seize his gun
    once they observed it lying on the floor behind the couch in his living room;
    appellant only challenges the warrantless entry into his apartment.
    9
    police do not need ―ironclad proof of a likely serious, life-threatening injury‖ to
    invoke the emergency aid exception).6 Furthermore, police officers do not have to
    6
    Courts have recognized three related doctrines pursuant to which the police
    have been authorized to enter dwellings without a warrant: the ―exigent
    circumstances‖ doctrine, the ―emergency aid‖ doctrine, and the ―community
    caretaker‖ doctrine, and the differences among these doctrines have not always
    been clear. See, e.g., State v. Deneui, 
    775 N.W.2d 221
    (S.D. 2009). We consider
    the emergency aid exception to fit within the broader category of exigent
    circumstances justifying entry into a dwelling without a warrant. See United States
    v. Booth, 
    455 A.2d 1351
    , 1354 (D.C. 1983) (noting with approval that several
    courts have extended the exigent circumstances doctrine to include situations
    where ―no crime assuredly has been committed,‖ but ―a person inside the premises
    is reasonably believed to be in peril‖); 
    Oliver, 656 A.2d at 1165
    & n.12
    (emergency aid exception is subset of exigent circumstances doctrine); Sutterfield
    v. City of Milwaukee, 
    751 F.3d 542
    , 553 (7th Cir. 2014) (same).
    In 
    Booth, supra
    , this court set forth the following test to be applied when the
    police enter a dwelling under the emergency aid exception: (1) the police must
    have ―probable cause, based on specific, articulable facts, to believe that
    immediate entry is necessary to assist someone in danger of bodily harm inside the
    premises‖; (2) the entry must be ―tailored carefully to achieve that objective‖; and
    (3) the entry must not be ―motivated primarily by the intent to arrest or search, but
    by an intent to investigate a genuine emergency and to render 
    assistance.‖ 455 A.2d at 1355-56
    . The court has not decided whether these requirements are still
    applicable in light of Brigham 
    City, supra
    , where the Supreme Court did not use
    the probable cause standard or consider the officer‘s subjective motivations, and
    instead stated that the police need an ―objectively reasonable basis‖ for believing
    that emergency aid is needed, Brigham 
    City, 547 U.S. at 406
    , and that the
    ―officer‘s subjective motivation is irrelevant‖ in these circumstances. 
    Id. at 404.
    We declined to address the potential implications of Brigham City in 
    Evans, 122 A.3d at 881
    , and we likewise decline to address those implications in this case
    because appellant does not argue that the officers‘ subjective motivations were
    relevant in this case and because we will assume arguendo that the ―objectively
    reasonable basis‖ standard is equivalent to the ―probable cause‖ standard.
    (continued …)
    10
    observe evidence of injuries before entering a premises pursuant to the emergency
    aid exception, because ―[t]he role of a peace officer includes preventing violence
    and restoring order, not simply rendering first aid to casualties.‖ 
    Id. Finally, in
    evaluating the reasonableness of the police officers‘ actions, ―the circumstances
    before [the officers] are not to be dissected and viewed singly; rather they must be
    considered as a whole. The totality of the circumstances -- the whole picture --
    must be taken into account.‖ 
    Oliver, 656 A.2d at 1166
    (quotations omitted).
    For the following reasons, the officers in this case had an objectively
    reasonable basis for believing that they needed to enter appellant‘s apartment in
    order to provide emergency assistance to the occupants of that apartment. First,
    the officers received a call for an assault ―in progress‖ at appellant‘s apartment
    building, so there was reason for the officers to believe that they were responding
    to a situation involving ongoing physical violence. Second, the information in the
    (… continued)
    The dissent faults the court for using the ―fuzzy‖ objectively reasonable
    basis standard. We believe this criticism is misplaced for two reasons. First, the
    objectively reasonable basis standard is the standard adopted by the Supreme
    Court, and we are not in a position to criticize this formulation, ―fuzzy‖ or
    otherwise. Second, the dissent also ignores the language used by this court in
    Oliver, where we explicitly interpreted probable cause in the emergency aid
    context to mean ―reasonable grounds to believe,‖ because that formulation ―fits
    well with a perceived emergency, in contrast with a basis for a prospective arrest,
    for which ‗probable cause‘ is the traditional 
    language.‖ 656 A.2d at 1166
    .
    11
    call was corroborated when the officers arrived at the apartment building and were
    met by the person who called 911 and told them he had called 911 because he
    heard yelling and screaming coming from an apartment on the second floor, and
    the 911 caller‘s reliability was enhanced by the fact that he did not remain
    anonymous but met the police at the apartment building. See, e.g., United States v.
    Jenkins, 
    329 F.3d 579
    , 581 (7th Cir. 2003) (911 call for assault in progress, when
    made by caller who identifies himself, can justify warrantless search under exigent
    circumstances exception); cf. Joseph v. United States, 
    926 A.2d 1156
    , 1161-62
    (D.C. 2007) (upholding investigative stop and frisk based on 911 call from
    identified citizen, noting that ―information from an identified citizen is
    presumptively reliable‖). Third, this information was further corroborated when
    the officers went to the second floor and heard yelling coming from appellant‘s
    apartment, including the sounds of a woman who sounded as if she were yelling in
    pain. Fourth, when the officers knocked on the door of appellant‘s apartment, no
    one answered the door for a period of one to three minutes, and when a woman
    finally did answer the door, she appeared to be panicked and concerned. Fifth, the
    woman who answered the door did not respond to the police officer‘s questions
    about what was happening inside the apartment, and instead opened the door
    before the officers entered the apartment.    Under these circumstances, it was
    12
    objectively reasonable for the police to believe that their assistance was needed to
    prevent injury, or further injury, to the occupants of appellant‘s apartment.
    The cases cited by appellant do not dictate a different result. Indeed, these
    cases involved situations where the police did not have an objectively reasonable
    basis to believe there was an ongoing emergency in the premises they entered
    without a warrant. For example, in 
    Evans, supra
    , the police entered an apartment
    without a warrant even though they had no objectively reasonable basis to believe
    that anyone in the apartment needed emergency aid, because the two participants in
    an alleged domestic violence incident both were being interviewed in a parking lot
    outside the apartment building at the time of entry, and because each person
    described a physical altercation that only involved the two of 
    them. 122 A.3d at 881-82
    .
    Likewise, in Washington v. United States, 
    585 A.2d 167
    (D.C. 1991), the
    police received a radio call for a woman with a gun, went to an apartment where
    the woman who answered the front door of the apartment told the police that her
    sister had a gun and she wanted it out of the house, and the officers then proceeded
    down a hallway to a room that was identified as the appellant‘s room. 
    Id. at 168.
    The officers knocked on the door and asked the occupant to come outside and,
    13
    after receiving no reply and waiting a few seconds, the officers forced the door
    open, breaking it off its hinges, and observed the appellant sitting peacefully on a
    bed with her three-year-old son. 
    Id. at 168,
    170. The police asked the appellant if
    she had a gun, and when she denied having one, the police removed the appellant‘s
    son from the room and searched the room, eventually finding a gun in a closed
    shopping bag on a shelf of the clothes closet. 
    Id. at 168.
    This court, in a 2-1
    opinion, reversed the trial court‘s denial of the appellant‘s suppression motion,
    finding that there were no exigent circumstances that justified a warrantless search
    of the room because the appellant was sitting ―peacefully on a bed. Her hands
    were in plain view; [and] she was under the continuing scrutiny of a police
    officer.‖ 
    Id. at 170.
    Under these circumstances, where the officers had ―taken
    effective control of the situation, and neither they nor any other persons here
    [were] threatened by the possibility that [appellant] would retrieve the gun and
    either use it or dispose of it,‖ the court found that the police lacked exigent
    circumstances justifying their warrantless search of the appellant‘s room. 
    Id. This case
    stands in stark contrast to the situations the police confronted in
    Evans and Washington. Unlike Evans, this case did not involve a situation where
    the participants in an alleged domestic violence dispute were already outside the
    apartment and being interviewed by the police. Rather, in this case the police
    14
    heard yelling and screaming coming from the apartment they subsequently entered,
    including the sounds of a woman yelling as if she were in pain. And unlike
    Washington, the police in this case were not confronted with a situation where a
    woman was sitting peacefully on her bed with her three-year-old child when they
    entered the room and conducted a warrantless search. To the contrary, the woman
    who answered the door in this case looked panicked and concerned, did not answer
    the door until one to three minutes after the officers knocked on the door and
    announced their presence, and did not answer the officer‘s questions about what
    was happening inside the apartment. Thus, Evans and Washington present very
    different circumstances from this case and do not demonstrate that the police acted
    in an objectively unreasonable manner when they entered appellant‘s apartment
    without a warrant.
    Appellant also argues that this court and the Supreme Court have upheld
    warrantless searches under the emergency aid exception only when there were
    stronger grounds to believe that emergency aid was needed. This argument has
    some force. Indeed, in 
    Booth, supra
    , this court upheld a warrantless entry into the
    front hall of a rooming house where the person who answered the door had dried
    blood on his face and the person did not respond to the officer‘s questions about
    where the blood came 
    from, 455 A.2d at 1356
    , and in Earle v. United States, 612
    
    15 A.2d 1258
    , 1263-64 (D.C. 1992), we upheld a warrantless entry into a house where
    the police received a call for shots fired in or at the rear of the house, the officer
    waited for ―quite some time‖ for someone to answer the door, and when someone
    finally answered the door, he behaved nervously, looked repeatedly back behind
    the door, refused to show his hands, and then tried to shut the door on the officer.
    Likewise, in Brigham 
    City, supra
    , the Supreme Court upheld a warrantless entry
    where the police observed a fight occurring inside a house in which one of the
    occupants hit another in the face, sending the injured person to the sink, spitting
    
    blood. 547 U.S. at 406
    . Finally, in 
    Fisher, supra
    , the Supreme Court upheld a
    warrantless entry where the officers saw blood on the hood of a truck outside a
    house, on clothes inside the truck, and on one of the doors to the house, and then
    observed an occupant inside the house, with a cut on his hand, screaming and
    throwing 
    things. 558 U.S. at 45-46
    .
    While each of these cases has indicia of exigent circumstances not present in
    this case, such as the observation of blood on an occupant or the observation of
    physical injuries being inflicted inside the dwelling, none of these cases either
    explicitly or implicitly required the observation of such injuries before the police
    can enter a dwelling pursuant to the emergency aid exception. To the contrary,
    such a requirement is inconsistent with the Supreme Court‘s admonition that ―the
    16
    role of a peace officer includes preventing violence and restoring order, not simply
    rendering first aid to casualties.‖ 
    Id. at 49
    (emphasis added). This requirement
    also is inconsistent with our own case law, in which we have upheld a warrantless
    entry under the emergency aid exception, without any evidence that the police had
    observed blood or physical injuries before entering the dwelling. See 
    Oliver, 656 A.2d at 1167
    (in kidnapping case, upholding warrantless entry without any
    evidence of ―blood at the scene, gunshots, or cries for help‖).
    Furthermore, numerous courts from other jurisdictions have found exigent
    circumstances in comparable situations where the police have received a report for
    yelling or screaming coming from a residence, and have not observed injuries to
    any of the occupants inside the dwelling prior to entry. See, e.g., Commonwealth
    v. Davido, 
    106 A.3d 611
    , 616-17 (Pa. 2014) (upholding warrantless entry where
    officers received 911 call for a ―domestic situation‖ that involved a ―man hitting a
    woman‖ and were informed en route to the residence that loud screaming had been
    heard from inside residence); 
    Jenkins, 329 F.3d at 580
    (upholding warrantless
    entry where police received 911 call for assault in progress and heard noise that
    sounded like a person standing up and falling down as they approached the front
    door); State v. Sharp, 
    973 P.2d 1171
    , 1175 (Ariz. 1999) (en banc) (upholding
    warrantless entry where person heard two screams coming from room on second
    17
    floor, along with pounding footsteps, and no one answered door when police
    knocked and announced their presence); United States v. Barone, 
    330 F.2d 543
    ,
    544 (2d Cir. 1964) (upholding warrantless entry where police heard ―loud
    screams‖ coming from rooming house in the middle of night); see also 3 WAYNE
    R. LAFAVE, SEARCH AND SEIZURE § 6.6 (a) at 608, 617-18 (5th ed. 2012) (―there
    are an infinite variety of situations in which entry for the purpose of rendering aid
    is reasonable,‖ including situations where police ―respond to what appears to be a
    fight within‖ the premises, and to ―screams in the dead of night‖).
    Appellant and the dissent argue that the police could have and should have
    obtained a warrant before entering appellant‘s apartment. However, in making this
    argument, appellant and the dissent conflate the justifications underlying the
    emergency aid exception with the rationales underlying the other exigent
    circumstance exceptions. More specifically, while the police need to reasonably
    believe that a crime has been committed before they can make a warrantless entry
    to prevent the imminent destruction of evidence, Brigham 
    City, 547 U.S. at 403
    , or
    engage in ―hot pursuit‖ of a fleeing suspect, id.; see also 
    Washington, 585 A.2d at 169
    , there is no such requirement when the police instead are attempting to provide
    emergency aid to the occupant of a dwelling. 
    Booth, 455 A.2d at 1354
    . Indeed, it
    is because the emergency aid exception is tied to the need to address an ongoing
    18
    emergency regardless of whether that emergency is the result of a crime, that we
    and other courts have noted that the police may enter a premises without a warrant
    if there is reason to believe that an occupant of the premises needs emergency
    assistance even if ―no crime . . . has been committed.‖ Id.; see also 
    Oliver, 656 A.2d at 1165
    (―Warrantless entry in an ‗emergency‘ requiring preventive action
    may be permitted by the [emergency aid] exception if a person inside the premises
    is reasonably believed to be in danger even though no crime has necessarily been
    committed‖); 
    Sutterfield, 751 F.3d at 560
    (emergency aid exception‘s defining
    characteristic is ―urgency,‖ not the existence of criminal conduct, and there is ―no
    logical need to additionally consider probable cause and the availability of a
    standard criminal warrant‖ when considering the emergency aid exception); People
    v. Hebert, 
    46 P.3d 473
    , 479 (Colo. 2002) (emergency aid exception does ―not
    require probable cause that contraband or other evidence of criminal activity is
    located at a particular place‖).
    Finally, the dissent argues the fact that police heard women yelling in
    appellant‘s apartment did not justify their warrantless entry into the apartment,
    stating that ―[p]eople make noises in their homes, including yelling; sometimes
    they yell very loudly.‖ Post at 27. But, of course, in evaluating the reasonableness
    of the police‘s actions, context is everything – if the police heard the occupants of
    19
    appellant‘s apartment yelling in joy on a Sunday afternoon after the Redskins
    scored a touchdown, they assuredly would not have an objectively reasonable basis
    to enter the apartment without a warrant. But in this case, where Officer Kniseley
    heard a woman inside the apartment yelling not in joy, but as if she were in pain or
    struggling, where he heard this yelling occur at 5 in the morning, after receiving a
    call for an assault in progress, where an occupant in the building directed the police
    to the apartment and confirmed that he had called 911 because he heard yelling and
    screaming coming from the apartment, and where the woman who answered the
    door looked panicked and concerned – in that context, the reasonableness of the
    police actions looks quite different.7
    Ultimately, as this court stated in Oliver, probable cause determinations in
    the emergency aid context do not emanate ―from an antiseptic courtroom [or] a
    7
    The court is constrained to note that the dissent repeatedly mischaracterizes
    both the scope and effect of the court‘s opinion, stating that it reduces the Fourth
    Amendment to a ―nullity‖ Post at 21, and ―demand[s] very little information‖ of
    the police before they enter a dwelling under the emergency aid exception. Post at
    31. With all due respect, the court‘s opinion neither makes the Fourth Amendment
    a nullity nor demands that the police possess very little information before entering
    a dwelling in order to render emergency aid. Rather, the Court‘s opinion is a
    narrow one, which notes the closeness of the issue presented and which sets forth
    in detail the factors supporting the warrantless entry in this case. Contrary to the
    dissent‘s protestations, the boundaries of the emergency aid exception have not
    been drastically redrawn to allow warrantless entries based on ―nothing more than
    speculation and forward momentum.‖ Post at 36.
    20
    sterile library‖; rather, they require a ―pragmatic analysis of ‗every day life on
    which reasonable and prudent men [and women], not legal technicians 
    act.‖ 656 A.2d at 1165-66
    (internal quotation marks omitted). And with this framework in
    mind, we hold that the police lawfully entered appellant‘s apartment without a
    warrant because they had an objectively reasonable belief that they needed to enter
    the apartment to provide emergency assistance to an injured occupant or to protect
    an occupant from imminent injury.
    III.
    For the reasons set forth above, the judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
    So ordered.
    EASTERLY, Associate Judge, dissenting: On the morning of his arrest, Mr.
    Ball was in the company of two female friends in what he thought was the privacy
    of his own home.1 He was naked and the women were in some state of undress.
    The trio was loud. A downstairs neighbor called the police. The police responded
    and then entered his apartment, without permission and without a warrant. In
    protest, Mr. Ball cried out, ―This is my house. I live here. This is my house.‖ He
    seemed to think the police had no authority to barge into his home. I would have
    thought such an entry was precisely what the Fourth Amendment prohibits. The
    1
    These undisputed facts are from the trial testimony.
    21
    majority opinion disagrees, interpreting the emergency aid exception to the Fourth
    Amendment‘s warrant requirement beyond the bounds of any precedent of the
    Supreme Court or this court.      The majority opinion demands so little of the
    government to justify a warrantless entry into a home, it ―reduce[s] the [Fourth]
    Amendment to a nullity and leave[s] the people‘s homes secure only in the
    discretion of police officers.‖ Johnson v. United States, 
    333 U.S. 10
    , 14 (1948).
    Although ―[t]he Fourth Amendment protects the individual‘s privacy in a
    variety of settings[,] [i]n none is the zone of privacy more clearly defined than
    when bounded by the unambiguous physical dimensions of an individual‘s home—
    a zone that finds its roots in clear and specific constitutional terms.‖ Payton v.
    New York, 
    445 U.S. 573
    , 589 (1980). The Fourth Amendment states that ―[t]he
    right of the people to be secure in their . . . houses . . . against unreasonable
    searches and seizures[] shall not be violated.‖ 
    Id. at 584-85.
    As the Supreme
    Court has explained, ―[t]hat language unequivocally establishes the proposition
    that at the very core of the Fourth Amendment stands the right of a man to retreat
    into his own home and there be free from unreasonable governmental intrusion.‖
    
    Id. at 589-90
    (internal quotation marks and brackets omitted); see also 
    id. at 585
    (―[P]hysical entry of the home is the chief evil against which the wording of the
    Fourth Amendment is directed.‖).
    22
    The sanctity of the home is protected by strict adherence to the warrant
    requirement. ―Crime, even in the privacy of one‘s own quarters, is, of course, of
    grave concern to society,‖ but ―[t]he right of officers to thrust themselves into a
    home is also a grave concern, not only to the individual, but to a society which
    chooses to dwell in reasonable security and freedom from surveillance.‖ 
    Johnson, 333 U.S. at 14
    . Thus, as a rule,
    the Fourth Amendment has interposed a magistrate
    between the citizen and the police . . . . not . . . to shield
    criminals nor to make the home a safe haven for illegal
    activities . . . [but] so that an objective mind might weigh
    the need to invade the privacy in order to enforce the law.
    The right of privacy was deemed too precious to entrust
    to the discretion of those whose job is the detection of
    crime and the arrest of criminals. Power is a heady thing,
    and history shows that the police acting on their own
    cannot be trusted. And so the Constitution requires a
    magistrate to pass on the desires of the police before they
    violate the privacy of the home.
    Washington v. United States, 
    585 A.2d 167
    , 168 (D.C. 1991) (quoting McDonald
    v. United States, 
    335 U.S. 451
    , 455-56 (1948)); see also 
    Payton, 445 U.S. at 586
    ,
    602 (explaining that the warrant requirement ―interpose[s] the magistrate‘s
    determination of probable cause between the zealous officer and the citizen‖ and
    ―minimizes the danger of needless intrusions.‖). Entering a home without first
    23
    obtaining a warrant is ―presumptively unreasonable.‖ Brigham City v. Stuart, 
    547 U.S. 398
    , 403 (2006).
    There are exceptions to the warrant requirement, but these are ―few in
    number and carefully delineated.‖ Welsh v. Wisconsin, 
    466 U.S. 740
    , 749 (1984).
    In particular, ―[a]ny warrantless entry based on exigent circumstances must, of
    course, be supported by a genuine exigency.‖ Kentucky v. King, 
    563 U.S. 452
    , 470
    (2011); see also Brigham 
    City, 547 U.S. at 403
    (the presumption that a warrant is
    needed to enter a home may be overcome only when ―‗the exigencies of the
    situation‘ make the needs of law enforcement so compelling that the warrantless
    search is objectively reasonable under the Fourth Amendment.‖). The emergency
    aid exception is one subset of exigent circumstances: ―[t]he need to protect or
    preserve life or avoid serious injury is justification for what would be otherwise
    illegal absent an exigency or emergency.‖ Brigham 
    City, 547 U.S. at 403
    . But,
    clearly, the boundaries of this exception cannot be drawn so as to swallow the rule.
    A critical means of cabining the exception is to hold the government to its
    burden of proof. Under our case law, the government must show that ―the police
    [had] probable cause, based on specific, articulable facts, to believe that immediate
    24
    entry [wa]s necessary to assist someone in danger of bodily harm inside the
    premises.‖ United States v. Booth, 
    455 A.2d 1351
    , 1355-56 (D.C. 1983)2; see also
    2
    Booth also directs consideration of the subjective intent of the police
    
    officer. 455 A.2d at 1354
    . The majority opinion acknowledges that ―probable
    cause‖ is the standard under Booth, but notes that ―[t]he court has not decided
    whether the[] requirements [of Booth] are still applicable in light of Brigham City.‖
    Ante note 6.
    Although the subjective intent of the officers has never been an issue in this
    case, the parties agree that the Supreme Court in Brigham City made clear that
    courts may not consider the subjective intent of the officer in assessing whether the
    police made a lawful, warrantless entry to provide emergency aid. As for whether
    the probable cause standard of Booth is still good law, the government argued for
    the first time in its brief on appeal that the Supreme Court in Brigham City
    displaced Booth and indicated a lesser quantum of proof—―an objectively
    reasonable basis‖—was required to authorize a warrantless entry under the
    emergency aid exception. But when pressed at oral argument about the meaning of
    this language, the government acknowledged, given that the police in Brigham City
    had seen a bloody fight in progress through a window and had at least probable
    cause to believe someone was in need of emergency aid, it was unlikely that the
    Court had meant to announce a new rule that called our probable cause
    requirement under Booth into question. The government then pivoted and argued
    that the police had probable cause to enter Mr. Ball‘s home.
    The majority opinion ―assume[s] arguendo that the ‗objectively reasonable
    basis‘ standard is equivalent to the ‗probable cause‘ standard,‖ ante note 6, but
    persists in using the former, fuzzy language. The majority asserts it is bound to use
    this terminology because the Supreme Court has ―adopted‖ it, id.; but, as explained
    above, it is unclear what the Supreme Court meant with the use of this language.
    Thus, in my view, we are bound to employ the standard as articulated by our court
    and consider whether the police had ―probable cause,‖ which we have specifically
    defined in this context. 
    Booth, 455 A.2d at 1355
    ; Oliver v. United States, 
    656 A.2d 1159
    , 1170 (D.C. 1995) (interpreting ―probable cause‖ to require ―reasonable
    grounds to believe based on specific articulable facts that immediate entry was
    necessary to assist someone in danger of bodily harm‖ quoting Booth); see also 
    id. at 1166
    (explaining that under our ―probable cause‖ standard, ―solid facts . . . not
    mere reasonable suspicion‖ is required).
    (continued …)
    25
    Bennett v. United States, 
    26 A.3d 745
    , 751 (D.C. 2011) (explaining that in the
    Fourth Amendment hierarchy, a ―hunch or gut feeling‖ is at the bottom rung,
    followed by ―reasonable articulable suspicion,‖ which is still ―substantially less
    than probable cause‖). After all, if police were authorized to enter a home based
    on less than probable cause to believe that someone inside is in need of aid, the
    Fourth Amendment‘s asserted protection for the home would be no meaningful
    protection at all.
    The majority opinion does not hold the government to its burden. To justify
    the warrantless entry into Mr. Ball‘s apartment, the majority relies on information
    that patently does not amount to probable cause (or an objectively reasonable basis,
    supra note 2) to believe that someone was in need of emergency aid. The sum
    total of the evidence the majority opinion can muster is testimony that one officer
    (… continued)
    Even if ―an objectively reasonable basis‖ were some quantum of information
    less than probable cause, what the police knew in this case before they crossed Mr.
    Ball‘s threshold would not suffice. See, e.g., Evans v. United States, 
    122 A.3d 876
    ,
    881 (D.C. 2015) (declining to address ―the potential implications of Brigham City‖
    and concluding that ―[e]ven applying a less stringent reasonable-belief standard,
    . . . the police did not have adequate reason to believe that immediate entry was
    necessary to provide emergency aid.‖).
    26
    heard a woman‘s voice unintelligibly yelling ―as if she was in pain or struggling‖ 3;
    that after the police knocked, identified themselves as police, and waited for a few
    minutes, a partially undressed woman answered the door; that according to one
    officer, the woman had a ―somewhat panicked and concerned‖ look in her eye and
    quickly glanced into the apartment instead of answering when the officer asked if
    everything was okay4; and that, while standing at the threshold, the police also saw
    another partially dressed woman standing in the living room. 5 Ante at 10-11; see
    also 
    id. at 3-4.
    3
    In explaining the police‘s justification for making a warrantless entry, the
    majority opinion effectively counts many times over the same reason: the fact that
    disturbing noise was heard coming from the apartment. Ante at 10-11. But the
    majority opinion glosses over the fact that there were three different descriptions of
    this noise credited by the trial court. Only Officer Kniseley provided the
    description on which the majority opinion rests its analysis. By contrast, his
    partner, Officer Davis, whose testimony the trial court also credited, only heard
    what sounded like ―commotion‖; and both officers testified that the 911 caller said
    he heard yelling that sounded like a ―fight.‖ See 
    Evans, 122 A.3d at 881
    (for the
    proposition that ―[t]he collective knowledge doctrine ‗must apply equally to
    information augmenting or diminishing the objective basis the police have for
    conducting a seizure‘‖ (citing Turner v. United States, 
    623 A.2d 1170
    , 1172 n.2
    (D.C. 1993)).
    4
    Officer Davis only perceived the woman who answered the door to be ―in
    a daze.‖
    5
    This narrative, presented for the first time at the suppression hearing a
    year-and-a-half after the arrest, is inconsistent with the affidavit in support of Mr.
    Ball‘s arrest. Other than noting the fact of a 911 call, it contains no information to
    support a determination that the police had probable cause to believe they needed
    to enter Mr. Ball‘s apartment to provide emergency aid. Instead, the Gerstein
    indicates that the police entered the apartment on consent.
    27
    Unquestionably, the information the police had before the door opened—
    unintelligible yelling ―as if‖ an inhabitant of the apartment was struggling or in
    pain—did not give them probable cause to believe that someone was in need of
    emergency aid, and the majority opinion does not argue otherwise. Ante at 18-19
    (relying on the yelling plus later-acquired ―context‖). People make noises in their
    homes, including yelling; sometimes they yell very loudly. If this is enough to
    justify a warrantless entry, then the Fourth Amendment‘s protections will turn on
    whether one has the luxury of owning a stand-alone home or whether one resides
    in an apartment or townhouse with shared walls. But see United States v. Ross,
    
    456 U.S. 798
    , 822 (1982) (acknowledging that under the Fourth Amendment ―the
    most frail cottage in the kingdom is absolutely entitled to the same guarantees of
    privacy as the most majestic mansion.‖).
    To be sure, the police were fully justified in knocking on Mr. Ball‘s door
    and conducting an inquiry based on the unintelligible yelling.       But, between
    knocking on the door and crossing the threshold of the home, the police did not
    gain sufficient additional information to give them probable cause to believe that
    28
    someone was in need of emergency aid. Rather, after the door opened, the police
    arguably moved further away from probable cause. 6
    Here, in response to police knocking, a woman came to the door. 7 Officer
    Kniseley‘s perception that she had a somewhat ―panicked and concerned look‖ on
    6
    The majority opinion suggests that it is impermissible ―dissection‖ to
    examine the totality of what the police knew along a timeline to determine whether
    the information they possessed ever rose to the level of probable cause so as to
    justify a warrantless entry to provide emergency aid—or whether their cause for
    mere suspicion remained static or even dissipated. Ante at 10 (citing 
    Oliver, 656 A.2d at 1166
    ). But this is precisely what we have said courts should do in
    assessing the evidence known to the police. 
    Oliver, 656 A.2d at 1165
    (explaining
    that in assessing whether the police may make a warrantless entry under the
    emergency aid exception, ―[f]acts . . . must be examined in the context and
    sequence in which they occur.‖). See, e.g., Washington v. United States, 
    585 A.2d 167
    (D.C. 1991) (discussed infra at 12-13); Douglas-Bey v. United States, 
    490 A.2d 1137
    , 1138 (D.C. 1985) (police had initial authority to make warrantless
    entry pursuant to emergency aid exception where they received a report of
    shooting at house and arrived to see the door ajar, making visible a shoe and a pool
    of blood; but police did not have authority to conduct a further search of the
    apartment without a warrant after they failed to discover anyone in need of
    assistance within).
    7
    Thus this case is distinguishable from three of the four nonbinding
    decisions from other jurisdictions the majority opinion cites to support its holding
    in the absence of supporting precedent from the Supreme Court or this court. Ante
    at 16-17 (citing United States v. Jenkins, 
    329 F.3d 579
    (7th Cir. 2003);
    Commonwealth v. Davido, 
    106 A.3d 611
    (Pa. 2012); State v. Sharp, 
    973 P.2d 1171
    (Ariz. 1999) (en banc)). In those cases, police suspicion only heightened because
    no one came to the door to open it when the police arrived to conduct their inquiry.
    
    Jenkins, 329 F.3d at 580
    ; 
    Davido, 106 A.3d at 616-17
    ; 
    Sharp, 973 P.2d at 1175
    .
    29
    her face was consistent with an individual being understandably surprised and
    concerned to be confronted by police at the door at 5 a.m. Her glance back into the
    apartment without immediately responding to the police was similarly ambiguous
    under the circumstances.8 See Duhart v. United States, 
    589 A.2d 895
    , 899 (D.C.
    1991) (explaining that ―there are limits to the inference that an experienced
    reasonable police officer can rationally draw‖ and that if the information available
    to the police ―is capable of too many innocent explanations, then the intrusion
    cannot be justified‖).
    Even construing these facts as providing some corroboration that something
    was wrong in the apartment, the government did not have probable cause to
    believe they needed to enter Mr. Ball‘s apartment to provide emergency aid. We
    must also factor in what the police did not see. Ante at 10 (acknowledging that
    ―the totality of the circumstances—the whole picture—must be taken into
    account‖). The police saw nothing to confirm their suspicion that there was an
    assault in progress.     Neither woman visible to the police from the threshold
    appeared to be ―in pain or struggling,‖ bleeding or bruised, crying or upset, or in
    8
    Cf. Robinson v. United States, 
    76 A.3d 329
    , 338-39 (D.C. 2013)
    (reaffirming that citizens have the right not to speak to the police).
    30
    any apparent physical danger. There was no sign of broken objects, upended
    furniture, or any evidence of a struggle or physical altercation. 9 In sum, after the
    woman opened the door to the apartment, Officer Kniseley‘s guess that a woman
    had been yelling because she was being physically assaulted was still just a guess.
    None of this court‘s prior cases support the majority opinion‘s broad
    conception of police authority to enter a home without a warrant based on mere
    speculation that someone may need emergency aid; instead they make clear that far
    more is required. The majority opinion resists the constraints of our precedent by
    attempting to show both that (1) the cases in which this court rejected warrantless
    entries based on the emergency aid exception, like Evans v. United States, 
    122 A.3d 876
    (D.C. 2015) and Washington v. United States, 
    585 A.2d 167
    (D.C. 1991),
    are distinguishable on their facts, and (2) cases in which we have upheld such
    9
    In the fourth nonbinding case cited by the majority opinion, United States
    v. Barone, the Second Circuit held long before Payton or Brigham City that the
    police were authorized to enter an apartment after hearing screams from inside.
    
    330 F.2d 543
    , 544 (2d Cir. 1964). But even in that case, the police had greater
    cause for concern: after knocking on the door, they were asked repeatedly by a
    male voice to identify themselves, but they were then greeted at the door by a
    woman with no sight of the man. 
    Id. at 545.
    In this case the police heard yelling
    ―as if‖ a woman was struggling and in pain and then were greeted at the door by a
    woman and saw another woman behind her in the apartment. The police had no
    reason to believe anyone else was in the apartment.
    31
    warrantless entries, like Oliver, 
    656 A.2d 1159
    , actually demand very little
    information when applying the probable cause standard.          These efforts are
    unpersuasive.
    It is immaterial that the facts of Evans and Washington do not mirror the
    facts of this case. The salience of these decisions comes from this court‘s refusal
    to endorse surmise and speculation as a basis for warrantless entry under the
    emergency aid exception. In Evans, the police tried to search an apartment when
    the only two known occupants, ―participants in an alleged domestic violence
    dispute,‖ were already outside being interviewed by other officers. Ante at 12. But
    this court found a Fourth Amendment violation because ―the police had no specific
    reason to believe that an unknown third party was in the apartment and in need of
    emergency aid.‖ 
    Evans, 122 A.3d at 882
    . The same is true is in this case. Upon
    seeing two women through the open apartment door, the police had no reason to
    believe that there was a third person inside who either might be in need of
    assistance or might place the two women in imminent danger. Supra note 9.
    In Washington the police actually had more particularized information than
    they had in this case about the potential danger: they were responding to a report
    32
    of a woman with a gun and the defendant‘s sister, having let them into the home,
    told them she wanted the gun ―out of the 
    house.‖ 585 A.2d at 168
    . Nevertheless
    this court held that, once the police had seen that the sister was ―in the living room
    by herself, out of harm‘s way,‖ they no longer had ―specific articulable facts‖ to
    believe that anyone was in immediate danger such that they were authorized to
    break down the door to the defendant‘s separately locked room and make a
    warrantless entry. 10 
    Id. at 172.
    The court held the police should have ―ceased their
    search immediately, or inquired into the nature of the weapon and the reason [the
    sister] called the police before proceeding.‖ 
    Id. Washington reaffirms
    both that
    the police may not rely on a speculative need to provide emergency aid to enter a
    home without a warrant and that when the police obtain information that
    contradicts or does not meaningfully buttress their speculation that someone is in
    need of emergency aid or imminent danger, they cannot simply plow forward,
    10
    Quoting an earlier part of the court‘s opinion addressing a different
    exception to the warrant requirement (not the emergency aid exception later
    discussed), the majority opinion suggests that this court‘s holding in Washington
    was narrower—that the court only determined that the police once in defendant‘s
    bedroom could not proceed to search the room after they saw the defendant sitting
    with her son on the bed. Ante at 
    12-13; 585 A.2d at 170
    . Even if this had been the
    court‘s holding, it would support suppression in this case, given that the police in
    this case likewise saw nothing once the apartment door opened to substantiate their
    suspicion that any one was in need of emergency aid. In fact, however, as
    discussed above, when conducting its analysis under the emergency aid exception,
    this court expressly held that the forcible entry into the defendant‘s bedroom was
    not authorized.
    33
    entering first and asking questions later. They must abide by the constraints of the
    Fourth Amendment and conduct any continuing investigation from the threshold.
    Washington and Evans do not stand alone in our case law in affirming that
    the emergency aid exception to the warrant requirement is narrowly interpreted and
    reserved for situations where the police have probable cause to believe there is a
    true emergency. Indeed, the majority opinion has no choice but to concede that the
    argument that our prior cases have demanded ―stronger grounds to believe that
    emergency aid was needed . . . has some force.‖ Ante at 14-15 (discussing Booth,
    
    455 A.2d 1351
    , and Earle v. United States, 
    612 A.2d 1258
    (D.C. 1992), and
    acknowledging ―each of these cases has indicia of exigent circumstances not
    present in this case, such as the observation of blood on an occupant or the
    observation of physical injuries being inflicted inside the dwelling.‖). But the
    majority opinion looks to Oliver v. United States, 
    656 A.2d 1159
    , 1167 (D.C.
    1995), to demonstrate that the requisite probable cause showing to believe
    someone is in need of emergency aid is not as demanding as this body of precedent
    indicates. Ante at 16 (citing Oliver for the proposition that this court has ―upheld a
    warrantless entry under the emergency aid exception, without any evidence that the
    police observed blood or physical injuries before entering the dwelling.‖). Oliver,
    however, does not support the majority opinion‘s loose interpretation of the
    34
    emergency aid exception to the warrant requirement: Oliver provides more
    authority to call this interpretation into question.
    In Oliver, the police were investigating the kidnapping of an eighteen-day
    old infant from a hospital; over the course of a day of investigation, including two
    visits to the defendant‘s apartment, they developed information that gave them
    probable cause to believe that the ―helpless and defenseless‖ newborn boy was
    there. 
    656 A.2d 1167
    . In that context—where the police knew a crime had been
    committed, they had a suspect, and the only question was whether the victim, a
    newborn baby, could be said to be in need of emergency aid so as to justify the
    police‘s warrantless entry into the apartment to retrieve him—the court
    acknowledged that ―it is true that this case is unlike the typical emergency
    exception where blood at the scene, gunshots, or cries for help will give police
    ‗probable cause, based on specific, articulable facts, to believe that immediate
    entry is necessary to assist someone in danger of bodily harm.‘‖ 
    Id. The court
    then explained that the departure from this norm was justified by ―the unique
    qualities of kidnapping‖ which ―may create exigent or emergency circumstances,
    even without direct evidence of a threat of bodily harm to the victim.‖          
    Id. (explaining that
    ―kidnapping investigations present unusually compelling
    circumstances for emergency analysis‖ because ―the life, freedom, and future of a
    35
    human being is at stake‖ and that kidnapped infants ―in particular‖ are especially
    vulnerable). Far from dispensing with the requirement that the police need ―direct
    evidence of a threat of bodily harm‖—like ―blood at the scene, gun shots or cries
    for help‖—to justify a warrantless entry under the emergency aid exception, Oliver
    confirms that in cases that do not involve kidnapping, such ―direct evidence‖ is
    required. Oliver demonstrates that the search in this case was unlawful.
    Without precedent from this court, the majority opinion tries to find support
    for its expansive interpretation of the emergency aid exception in the Supreme
    Court‘s statement that the ―role of a peace officer includes preventing violence and
    restoring order, not simply rendering first aid to casualties.‖ Ante at 10, 16 (quoting
    Michigan v. Fisher, 
    558 U.S. 45
    , 48 (2009) (quoting Brigham City, Utah v. Stuart,
    
    547 U.S. 398
    , 406 (2006))). But Michigan v. Fisher provides a dubious foundation
    for the majority opinion‘s holding, given that the police in that case actually
    observed ―violent behavior.‖ Specifically, the police saw (first through a window,
    then through an open door) that Mr. Fisher was ―rag[ing],‖ ―screaming and
    throwing things‖ inside his house and had already cut his hand, leaving blood on
    the hood of his truck. 
    Id. at 45,
    48. Based on these observations, the Supreme
    Court determined that ―it was reasonable [for the police] to believe that [Mr.]
    Fisher had hurt himself . . . and needed treatment that in his rage he was unable to
    36
    provide,‖ or that he ―was about to hurt . . . someone else.‖ 
    Id. at 49
    . Similarly, in
    Brigham City, the only other case in which the Supreme Court has upheld a
    warrantless entry under the emergency aid exception, the police observed a fight in
    the house through a kitchen window and saw one individual get punched in the
    face and then spit blood in the sink while others in the room attempted to restrain
    the assailant from continuing the 
    attack. 547 U.S. at 401
    . The majority opinion
    cannot credibly assert that the Supreme Court‘s conception of the emergency aid
    exception to the warrant requirement encompasses the warrantless, nonconsensual
    entry into Mr. Ball‘s apartment.
    By affirming a warrantless home entry in this case based on nothing more
    than speculation and forward momentum, the majority opinion is redrawing the
    boundaries of Fourth Amendment protection for the home and diminishing its
    protection.   The majority opinion denies this, asserting that its fact-specific
    analysis is ―narrow.‖ Ante note 7. But given that the facts it cites do not support—
    either on their own terms or under our case law—a determination that the police
    had probable cause to believe anyone in Mr. Ball‘s apartment was in need of
    emergency aid, I cannot agree. I see no limiting principle to the majority opinion‘s
    analysis. Rather, it effectively endorses the use of the emergency aid exception to
    justify warrantless investigative searches of homes.
    37
    The rationale for this retrenchment of Fourth Amendment protections for the
    home appears to be that the right to privacy must yield to the needs of law
    enforcement to prevent crime.11 But the Supreme Court has already rejected such
    overreaching reasoning in the investigative context:
    The investigation of crime would always be simplified if
    warrants were unnecessary. But the Fourth Amendment
    reflects the view of those who wrote the Bill of Rights
    that the privacy of a person‘s home and property may not
    be totally sacrificed in the name of maximum simplicity
    in enforcement of the criminal law.
    
    Mincey, 437 U.S. at 393
    . This limit on police powers cannot be circumvented in
    the name of hypothetical crime prevention.
    11
    The majority opinion asserts that ―[a]ppellant and the dissent argue that
    the police could have and should have obtained a warrant before entering his
    apartment‖ and in so doing ―conflate the emergency aid exception with rationales
    underlying the other exigent circumstance exceptions.‖ Ante at 17. I take no
    position as to whether the police could have obtained a warrant. My point is that
    they had no authority to enter Mr. Ball‘s home without one. And this
    determination is not based on any ―conflation‖ of exceptions to the warrant
    requirement; it is premised on the constitutional rule that if the police do not have
    consent and do not legitimately fall under any exception to the warrant
    requirement, they cannot enter a home without a warrant. Supra at 22-33.
    38
    The majority opinion gives too little regard to the ―precious‖ protection the
    Fourth Amendment affords the home against intrusion by government agents.
    
    Washington, 585 A.2d at 168
    . Courts bear the responsibility to set limits to ensure
    that the goals of law enforcement and peace keeping do not automatically override
    Fourth Amendment protections afforded to the home. Until now, this court has
    consistently held that more than speculation, if not actual evidence of injury or
    imminent danger, is required to support a determination that the police had
    probable cause to enter a home without a warrant to provide emergency aid. We
    should adhere to this precedent—not redraw the boundaries of this previously
    narrow exception to the warrant requirement so as to authorize an otherwise illegal
    entry. We should hold that the warrantless, nonconsensual search in this case was
    invalid. And we should uphold Mr. Ball‘s Fourth Amendment privacy rights in his
    home. I respectfully dissent.