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45 New Eng. L. Rev. 7 (2010-2011)
Step outside, Please: Warrantless Doorway Arrests and the Problem of Constructive Entry

handle is hein.journals/newlr45 and id is 9 raw text is: Articles
Step Outside, Please - Warrantless
Doorway Arrests and the Problem of
Constructive Entry
STEVEN B. Dow*
ABSTRACT
The U.S. Supreme Court has established two sets of Fourth
Amendment rules governing felony arrests: one set governs public arrests,
and another set governs in-home arrests. Under United States v. Watson,
police may arrest a suspect in public when there is probable cause to
believe that person has committed a crime; no warrant is required. Under
Payton v. New York, police may not enter a dwelling to carry out a routine
felony arrest without first obtaining a warrant from a judicial official. This
warrant requirement is a manifestation of the heightened level of
protection accorded to individual privacy in a home. With increasing
frequency, some police have evaded the warrant requirement by engaging
in tactics outside a home that coerce a suspect to exit the home in order to
carry out a warrantless public arrest. Courts are deeply divided over
whether this violates the Payton rule. Some lower federal appellate courts
and state courts find a violation of the Fourth Amendment in such tactics
under the doctrine of constructive entry but disagree over the
circumstances in which this doctrine applies. The result is great uncertainty
over this critical Fourth Amendment issue.
In exploring the constructive entry doctrine, this Article analyzes it
within the context of the arrest rules as well as the broader implications of
the Payton decision. It analyzes how the doctrine is linked to and supported
Associate Professor of Law, Michigan State University, School of Criminal Justice; Ph.D.,
The University of Michigan; M.A., The University of Michigan; J.D., Ohio State University. I
would like to thank Linda L. Dow for her valuable help with editing and proofreading this
Article.

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