Upcoming Case Preview | Case v. Montana | Warrantless Welfare Checks: When Can Cops Enter to your Castle Without Cause?
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Case v. Montana | Case No. 24-624 | Oral Argument Date: 10/15/25 | Docket Link: Here
Question Presented: Whether law enforcement may enter a home without a search warrant based on less than probable cause that an emergency is occurring, or whether the emergency-aid exception requires probable cause.
Other Referenced Episodes:
- August 5th Roundup: Presidential Power Crushes Agency Independence, Court Places Voting Rights Act in Crosshairs and Maryland v. Shatzer, a Case That Evolved Beyond Its Origins | Here
Overview
This episode examines Case v. Montana, a Fourth Amendment case that has drawn unprecedented attention with 35 states weighing in, challenging the established emergency-aid exception by asking the Supreme Court to require probable cause rather than the current "objectively reasonable belief" standard for warrantless home entries during emergencies. The case could fundamentally reshape how police respond to suicide calls, medical emergencies, and welfare checks nationwide.
Episode Roadmap
Opening: Unprecedented Stakes and Attention
- October 15th, 2025 oral argument date
- 35 states weighing in, with 34 opposing the petitioner's position
- Potential nationwide impact on emergency response procedures
- Novel aspect: Petitioner seeking to restrict, not expand, police authority
Constitutional Framework: The Fourth Amendment Text
- "The right of the people to be secure... against unreasonable searches and seizures"
- Two-clause structure: Reasonableness Clause vs. Warrant Clause
- No textual emergency-aid exception - entirely judge-made doctrine
- Court's recent skepticism toward expansive judge-made constitutional doctrines
Background: The Tragic Facts in Anaconda, Montana
- September 2021: William Trevor Case's suicide threat to ex-girlfriend J.H.
- Escalating call: drinking, gun cocking sounds, "pop" followed by dead air
- J.H.'s 9-1-1 call reporting believed suicide attempt
- Officers' prior knowledge of Case's history with suicide attempts and violence
The Police Response and Corroborating Evidence
- 18-minute preparation period with protective equipment
- Window observations: keys on table, empty beer cans, empty gun holster, apparent suicide note
- Entry through unlocked door during protective sweep
- Case emerges from closet pointing handgun at Sergeant Pasha
- Officer shoots Case in abdomen; medical aid rendered
Procedural History: The Court Journey
- Trial court denies suppression motion, finds "exigent circumstance"
- Case convicted of assaulting peace officer, sentenced to 60 years
- Montana Supreme Court affirms 4-3 with vigorous dissent
- Supreme Court grants certiorari to resolve deep circuit split
The Circuit Split Crisis
"Reasonable Belief" Courts:
- First, Eighth, and Tenth Circuits plus Montana and three other states
- Standard: "Objective, specific and articulable facts from which an experienced officer would suspect citizen needs help"
"Probable Cause" Courts:
- D.C., Second, and Eleventh Circuits plus Nebraska and Colorado
- Standard: "Probable cause to believe person is seriously injured or threatened with such injury"
Case's Three Main Arguments (Seeking Higher Standard)
Argument 1: Historical Originalism
- Common law required "more than probable cause, not less" for warrantless home entries
- Only allowed entries to stop "affrays" that officers personally witnessed
- Framers expected higher standard than current practice
Argument 2: Fourth Amendment's Core Purpose
- Chief purpose: "restrain discretionary government searches of the home"
- Lower standards invite pretextual searches and abuse
- Homes deserve highest level of Fourth Amendment protection
Argument 3: Universal Probable Cause Requirement
- Probable cause was "general safeguard against all unreasonable searches"
- Should apply to all government intrusions, not just criminal investigations
- Framers viewed probable cause as "vital safeguard against unfounded searches"
Montana's Three Main Arguments (Defending Current Standard)
Argument 1: Constitutional Structure and Reasonableness Standard
- Fourth Amendment's two-clause structure allows independent operation
- Reasonableness, not probable cause, is ultimate constitutional touchstone
- Historical practice: officers liable for trespass unless jury found action "reasonable"
- Extensive common law permitted warrantless entries for various purposes including "saving life"
Argument 2: Probable Cause Would Eliminate Emergency-Aid Exception
- "Criminality inheres in the concept of probable cause" - rooted in criminal investigations
- Officers cannot develop probable cause when no crime has occurred
- Emergency situations (suicide, medical emergencies, welfare checks) typically involve no criminal activity
- Would create deadly consequences: homes become "place where citizens who need urgent medical help died alone and in agony"
Argument 3: Officers' Actions Were Objectively Reasonable
- Detailed 9-1-1 call from identified person with personal knowledge
- Multiple corroborating observations: vehicle, empty holster, apparent suicide note
- Officers took exactly the investigative steps the Constitution should require
- Even under heightened standard, facts here would satisfy constitutional requirements
Key Precedents in Battle
Brigham City v. Stuart (2006)
- Established current "objectively reasonable basis for believing" standard
- Officers may enter without warrant when occupant needs emergency aid
- No mention of probable cause requirement for emergency-aid entries
Michigan v. Fisher (2009)
- Reaffirmed Brigham City's "objectively reasonable" standard
- Rejected repeated requests to adopt probable cause or reasonable suspicion standards
Caniglia v. Strom (2021)
- Rejected broad community caretaking authority but preserved emergency aid exception
- Justice Kavanaugh noted need for Court to clarify "contours of exigent circumstances doctrine"
- Distinguished between community caretaking functions and actual exigencies
Lange v. California (2021)
- Emphasized exigent circumstances require only "objectively reasonable" belief
- No probable cause requirement for exigencies themselves
Constitutional Stakes and Broader Implications
If Case Wins (Probable Cause Required):
- Could eliminate effective emergency response in non-criminal situations
- Would require much higher certainty before officers can help people in crisis
- Particularly impacts rural areas where police are first responders
- Creates potential constitutional barrier to life-saving interventions
If Montana Wins (Reasonable Belief Preserved):
- Maintains current emergency response capabilities
- Preserves established Brigham City doctrine from 2006
- Could potentially enable broader police entries with limited oversight
- Keeps focus on reasonableness rather than rigid probable cause requirement
Cultural and Legal Tensions
- Privacy rights versus public safety needs
- Judicial restraint versus practical emergency response
- Individual autonomy versus community protection
- Textual interpretation versus judge-made doctrine
Looking Ahead to October 15th Oral Arguments
- How justices handle circuit split requiring national resolution
- Practical consequences: workability of probable cause in emergencies
- Historical disputes about common law and Framers' intent
- Court's approach to relatively recent Brigham City precedent (2006)
- Impact of Court's recent skepticism toward broad judge-made exceptions
Key Legal Concepts Explained
- Emergency-aid exception to warrant requirement
- Objectively reasonable belief standard vs. probable cause
- Fourth Amendment's Reasonableness Clause vs. Warrant Clause
- Circuit splits and Supreme Court resolution function
- Exigent circumstances doctrine
- Judge-made constitutional exceptions
- Constitutional balancing tests
332 episodes