Search without a Warrant Flashcards
There are a number of powers that allow officers to search without a warrant. Covered in this section are:
Section 17 PACE – enter and search for people (either to arrest, recapture or save)
Section 18 PACE – enter and search for evidence after arrest (occupied or controlled)
Section 19 PACE – power to seize items from premises
Section 22 PACE – power to retain items seized
*Section 32 PACE – enter and search for evidence upon arrest (place of arrest)
UK Borders Act 2007 – power to seize and retain ID documents
Proceeds of Crime Act 2002 – Power to seize and retain cash or other proceeds of crime
Proceeds of Crimes Act 2002
One consideration that should always be in your mind when searching premises for any reason is…
Identifying cash or anything else that could be the proceeds of crime.
This is particularly relevant when searching premises occupied or controlled by or being used by those people involved in supplying drugs.
The Proceeds of Crime Act 2002 is the principle money laundering legislation in the UK and gives officers various powers in this area.
Proceeds of Crimes Act 2002
Powers
Identifying cash or anything else that could be the proceeds of crime.
Section 289 says that if officers are lawfully engaged in searching premises and there are grounds for suspecting there is cash on the premises which has been obtained through unlawful conduct or intended by any person to be used in unlawful conduct, then the officers may search for that cash.
Section 294 gives officers the power to seize this cash so long as it is not less than the minimum amount stipulated by the Secretary of State. This amount is currently £1,000.
Proceeds of Crimes Act 2002
Powers
Identifying cash or anything else that could be the proceeds of crime.
‘Cash’ in question must have been obtained through unlawful conduct or intended by any person to be used in unlawful conduct and includes:
- notes and coins in any currency,
- postal orders,
- cheques of any kind, including travellers’ cheques,
- bankers’ drafts,
- bearer bonds and bearer shares (must be found in the United Kingdom).
So, if you are engaged in a premises search and find cash that you consider to be over £1,000 you may seize it if the occupier fails to give a satisfactory reason for it.
Proceeds of Crimes Act 2002
When searching premises under the Proceeds of Crime Act 2002, you should also make sure that you look for any financial clues that may assist you in verifying the wealth, criminal finances and movement of suspects.
Examples of such material might be:
- cheque books,
- receipts,
- bank paying in books,
- evidence of an extravagant lifestyle,
- documentation about travel arrangements e.g. ticket confirmations.
Section 17 PACE Searches
What does this power give?
Gives officers the authority to enter any premises in order to either arrest people for certain offences, recapture people in certain circumstances, save life and limb, or to protect property from serious damage.
Section 17 PACE Searches
This power gives officers the authority to enter any premises in order to either arrest people for certain offences, what may this be for?
- anyone wanted on warrant issued by a court
- anyone who has committed an indictable offence. (Indictable offences are the more serious criminal offences e.g. theft, robbery, serious assault, drugs offences).
- arrest a young person or child who has been remanded to local authority accommodation or youth detention accommodation
- arrest a person who has escaped from a prison, remand centre, young offenders institute, or secure training centre.
Section 17 PACE Searches
This power gives officers the authority to enter any premises in order to recapture people in certain circumstances, what may this be for?
- anyone who has escaped from you or a colleague (ie after being arrested) and whom you are in immediate pursuit of
It is important to understand here that you must be in immediate ‘hot’ pursuit to use this power. This can be for any offence including anything not contained in the arrest section above.
The person MUST however have been arrested and then run away from you.
Section 17 PACE Searches
This power gives officers the authority to enter any premises in order to save life and limb, what may this be for?
This needs to be situations where the person is at risk of serious injury or in need of immediate care.
It is usually used when someone needs immediate help and is either refusing it or is incapacitated and unable to allow you entry.
Section 17 PACE Searches
This power gives officers the authority to enter any premises in order to protect property from serious damage, what may this be for?
As with saving life this needs to be instances of serious damage such as a major water leak or fire.
Section 17 PACE Searches
This power gives officers the authority to enter any premises in order to either arrest people for certain offences, recapture people in certain circumstances, save life and limb, or to protect property from serious damage.
In order to exercise this power of entry under any of the above circumstances, you must have…
Reasonable grounds to believe that the person whom you will arrest or recapture are on the premises that you want to enter (Sec 17.2).
However, when entering to save life or prevent serious damage to property you actually only need reasonable grounds to suspect that the someone is on the premises or that property will be damaged.
Section 17 PACE Searches
Extent of search
When using this power, you may only enter and search to the extent that it is necessary to find the person to be arrested or recaptured. In addition, if the building has separate dwellings, e.g. a block of flats or a house which has private rented rooms, you may only enter the flat or room where you believe the person you are seeking may be, and any communal parts.
Section 17 PACE example scenario:
Scenario 1: You receive a briefing that a well-known burglar is wanted for failing to appear at court. The court have issued an arrest warrant. You are tasked with attending his home address to carry out an arrest enquiry. During the briefing a colleague tells you that when the male was last arrested he was found hiding underneath his bed at the address. On arrival at the address some officers cover the rear access and you go to the front door. You knock loudly on the door for several minutes and shout through the letter box. There is no reply. You cannot hear or see any signs of anyone inside. One of your colleagues speaks with a neighbour who says they haven’t seen the occupant for a few days.
Answer 1: Without further information that the male is in his address NOW then you cannot use Sec 17 to enter and search for him as you do not have reasonable grounds to believe that he is inside. If you had seen or heard any ‘signs of life’ ( eg people talking / whispering, doors closing, curtains moving, TV / radio on) then you may decide that you believe that someone is inside the premises NOW and that they won’t open the door. With this added information you would be justified in using Sec 17 PACE to enter and search for the male in order to arrest them under the authority of the court warrant. Note that the court warrant gives you the power of arrest, but the power to enter comes from Sec 17.
Section 17 PACE example scenario:
Scenario 2: You are on patrol in a vehicle when you suddenly see a young male aged about 15 running across the road in front of you and into a nearby housing estate. You then see a male chasing him. The male sees the police car, points at the 15-year-old and shouts “He’s robbed my phone”. You exit from your car and begin running after the young male. You see him go into a ground floor flat on the estate. You get to the door and bang it on shouting for it to be opened. There is no response, but you can hear a female and young male arguing inside the address.
Answer 2: It is reasonable in these circumstances to suspect that an indictable offence has been committed ie theft, robbery (powers of arrest only require grounds to suspect). It is also reasonable to believe that the person who committed that offence is inside a premises now. This belief comes from the fact that you saw him enter. In these circumstances you would be able to use Sec 17 PACE to enter and search the premises in order to arrest the male for an indictable offence. Once you had done this then you would be able to confirm what had actually happened and decide on your course of action.
Section 17 PACE example scenario:
Scenario 3: You receive a call from a concerned resident that their elderly neighbour hasn’t been seen for two days. The resident reports that they always pop in and see their neighbour at the same time each day but today there has been no reply at the neighbours’ door and they do not have a key or details of any relatives nearby. The resident also reports that the elderly neighbour is immobile and unable to leave the house unaided. You attend the address and can get no reply to your repeated knocking and there no ‘signs of life’ inside.
Answer 3: This one needs a bit of consideration. Do we have enough information that the person we are wanting to save is on the premises now? We have information that they can’t go out unaided, but they may have been picked up by a friend or relative and taken out for the day and which the neighbour knew nothing of. Information that may give you additional grounds that someone is on premises now and needed help might include:
moans, shouts, screams for help,
calls to emergency services from someone inside the premises,
visible signs through the window or letter box of someone in distress,
more certainty from the neighbour that the elderly resident hasn’t left the house since they last saw them.