PER CURIAM.
Anthony Alston appeals the January 31, 2008 denial of his motion to suppress certain evidence found in his home. Defendant was charged in Union County Indictment No. 07-07-0636 with five counts related to the manufacture, distribution, and possession of controlled dangerous substances (CDS). After the decision was rendered, he entered a guilty plea to count four of the indictment, second-degree possession of cocaine with intent to distribute. In accordance with that plea, he was sentenced to six years imprisonment, subject to three years of parole ineligibility.
On appeal, defendant asserts as follows:
We affirm based on the motion judge's reasoned and careful analysis of the facts and circumstances, and application of the emergency aid and inevitable discovery doctrines. We add only the following brief comments.
At the motion to suppress hearing, Elizabeth Police Department Narcotics Officer Joseph McDonough testified that on March 22, 2007, at approximately 2:30 p.m., he observed defendant exchange a small item for cash in an apparent drug transaction. The police stopped the suspected buyer approximately two blocks away and as the officers approached, he dropped two bags of heroin onto the ground. The police returned to the area where they had seen the drug sale and soon located defendant. He too discarded a bundle of heroin as he was approached and was immediately arrested. Defendant indicated that his house was approximately two doors away, and that his "little girl" was home alone. As a result, several officers, including McDonough, went to the apartment. Although McDonough was not the first to arrive, he recalled seeing a six-year-old child standing in the entranceway and hearing a dog growling behind a closed and locked bedroom door. He left the premises to obtain a search warrant.
Captain Patrick Shannon, who observed the drug transaction from a different unmarked vehicle, also participated in the arrest and subsequent search. Shannon testified he obtained defendant's key, and along with other officers, walked to the apartment. He knocked on the door, and the child asked "who it was." When she opened the door, he showed her his badge. The child, who Shannon estimated was seven or eight, said her father did not want people in the apartment. As they spoke, he could hear a dog barking inside.
Ten to fifteen minutes later, the child's grandfather appeared and told the officers there was another child in the apartment, a fact Shannon said "took me back a little bit" as he had been unaware of the presence of any other children. The grandfather said this second child was about two years old. At that point, Shannon walked into the apartment and found the infant on a makeshift bed in the living room area, fast asleep. He asked the grandfather to "take charge" of the child. Shannon could hear the dog barking behind the closed door; the child described the animal as "nasty" and explained that was the reason it was shut up in the bedroom. Shannon contacted police headquarters to request the assistance of a dog warden.
Eventually, two men from the Animal Control Shelter arrived with dog sticks. Shannon observed the dog trying to force his way out of the bedroom. Its paw was poking out from underneath the door, and it was growling, barking, and scratching. When a dog warden opened the door, the dog lunged out before retreating back into the bedroom. Shannon followed the dog wardens inside
The children's maternal grandfather, Artie McDuffie, testified on defendant's behalf. McDuffie received his mail at defendant's apartment and was outside the building waiting for the mailman the day defendant was arrested. Contrary to the officers' testimony, McDuffie said the police ran past him, and that when he looked up they were at defendant's door. By the time he rushed over, they had already let themselves in with the key. When his grandchild came over to talk to the officers, he silenced her and told her to sit down. He was asked by one of the officers if he would remove the dog, but refused because "[t]he dog bit[] me." McDuffie left with his granddaughters approximately five minutes later.
The motion judge first considered the emergency aid doctrine exception to the search warrant requirement. The exception applies where there is an emergency, a search not motivated by the desire to find evidence, and a nexus between the search and the emergency.
Furthermore, the inevitable discovery doctrine legitimized the warrantless seizure of the drugs.
The need to call in Animal Control wardens to remove the dog from the premises constituted exigent circumstances which themselves were independent grounds for entry into the bedroom. It is undisputed that, so long as the officers' presence was legitimized by exigent circumstances, the plain view observations of the drugs made their seizure and ultimate admission into evidence proper.
Affirmed.