PUBLISHED
Filed: September 14, 2009
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
MARK J. HUNSBERGER; CHERYL A.
HUNSBERGER,
Plaintiffs-Appellees,
v.
No. 08-1782
J. A. WOOD, Deputy Sheriff,
Botetourt County Sheriff’s Office, (7:07-cv-00087-
SGW-MFU)
Defendant-Appellant,
and
WILLIAM W. BLESSARD; JOHN DOE,
Defendants.
ORDER
In a poll requested by a member of the court on the petition
for rehearing en banc, Judges Michael, Motz, King, and Greg-
ory voted to rehear the case en banc. Chief Judge Traxler and
Judges Wilkinson, Niemeyer, Shedd, and Duncan voted to
deny rehearing en banc. Judge Agee did not participate in the
decision of this case. As a majority of participating judges has
voted against rehearing en banc and as the panel has voted to
deny rehearing, the petition for rehearing and rehearing en
banc is hereby denied.
Judge Wilkinson wrote an opinion concurring in the denial
of rehearing en banc. Judge Motz wrote an opinion dissenting
from the denial of rehearing en banc.
2 HUNSBERGER v. WOOD
Entered for the court at the direction of Judge Wilkinson.
For the Court
/s/ Patricia S. Connor
Clerk
WILKINSON, Circuit Judge, concurring in the denial of
rehearing en banc:
I appreciate the views of my dissenting colleague and add
only these words to the panel opinion. Hunsberger v. Wood,
570 F.3d 546 (4th Cir. 2009). I believe the panel’s judgment
to be quite correct and fully consistent with the Supreme
Court’s often repeated objective of not subjecting officers
making difficult discretionary judgments to monetary liability
and retrospective relief. See Harlow v. Fitzgerald, 457 U.S.
800, 816 (1982); Cloaninger v. McDevitt, 555 F.3d 324, 331
(4th Cir. 2009). The cases reiterating this principle are well-
known and too numerous to mention, and the almost unparal-
leled frequency of the principle’s iteration by the Court attests
not only to its importance to law enforcement but also to its
extension of simple fairness to officers who cannot be said to
be liable for actions that are found unlawful only by courts
splitting hairs in hindsight. See, e.g., Pearson v. Callahan,
129 S.Ct. 808, 815 (2009); Saucier v. Katz, 533 U.S. 194, 202
(2001); Hunter v. Bryant, 502 U.S. 224, 227 (1991); Mitchell
v. Forsyth, 472 U.S. 511, 526 (1985).
Whatever the prong of the Pearson inquiry, the ultimate
touchstone is one of objective reasonableness. Multiple objec-
tive indicators made the officer’s judgment a reasonable one
here. The presence of Mr. Blessard in plaintiffs’ home was
solely to aid the officer in finding Blessard’s lost and quite
possibly endangered stepchild. JA 404, 407. A teenage girl
was missing after midnight. JA 1176-77. She was not where
HUNSBERGER v. WOOD 3
she was supposed to be. JA 363, 368-69, 1308. She did not
respond to any of her stepfather’s repeated attempts to reach
her by cell phone. JA 385, 547. Her stepfather was by all
accounts, even the plaintiffs’, "worried sick" about his step-
daughter. JA 966, 607, 383. The child’s car was parked out-
side the home of plaintiff (a stranger), blocking the road. JA
369, 1279-80. A home in the immediate neighborhood had
recently burned down as the apparent result of unauthorized
use. JA 1315-16. There had been two 911 calls about activity
at the Hunsberger home. JA 911, 915. A neighbor informed
the officers that the Hunsbergers were on vacation. JA 231,
1269. As the officers approached the home, two people fled
the darkened premises. JA 149-50. The two officers indicated
independently that upon their approach, lights turned off, JA
1284, 1413, and despite repeated rings of the doorbell, no one
answered the door, JA 1121, 1176, 1290-91, 1422-23.
While plaintiffs attempt to create a disputed issue of fact as
to this last sentence, they do not dispute that two people fled
the premises upon the officers’ approach. JA 149-50. Nor do
they dispute the reasonableness of Sergeant Wood’s overall
perception that there was suspicious behavior at the Hunsber-
ger home, that whoever was inside desperately wished to
avoid contact with the police, and that the officer heard
strange noises in the garage and a basement door shut and
lock upon his approach. JA 1309, 1176-77. However one tries
to slice and dice it, any objectively reasonable officer would
have been concerned not only for the safety of the Hunsber-
gers’ property but for the safety of the occupants inside.
Now of course in a situation that unfolded as rapidly as this
one did, there will invariably be points of disputed recollec-
tion. In fact, the remarkable thing about this case is how little
is in dispute, given the run of cases that we have seen where
material matters were genuinely at issue. To find liability
under these circumstances would simply deal a heavy blow to
the capacity of law enforcement to protect persons and prop-
erty in situations where perfectly reasonable people would
4 HUNSBERGER v. WOOD
perceive them to be at real risk. Where protective police activ-
ity even to ensure human safety carries heavy monetary con-
sequences and a failure to act carries no penalty at all, see
DeShaney v. Winnebago County Dep’t of Soc. Servs., 489
U.S. 189 (1989), it is not difficult to predict that the incentives
for inaction will at some point discourage even the most sen-
sible and prudent protective steps.
I repeat that the officer here confronted two different,
mutually-reinforcing situations—the need to prevent vandal-
ism and to locate a missing girl before she was seriously
harmed. By the time the officer filled out a warrant affidavit
and tried to rustle up a magistrate in the wee hours of the
morning, it may well have been too late. If we were to hold
the officer liable for damages in this situation, we would go
far to establishing a broad rule that would prevent police from
taking even the most reasonable steps to prevent serious dam-
age to absent homeowners’ property and to locate missing
minors who might be in situations beyond their capacity to
cope.
Plaintiffs seem to suggest that the Fourth Amendment
requires a flat rule against the presence of civilians in a home
during an officer’s search. But a flat rule is not consistent with
the reasoning of Wilson v. Layne, 526 U.S. 603 (1999). Wil-
son did not establish a blanket rule against the presence of
civilians during searches; instead, it made clear that courts
must undertake case-by-case inquiries into whether a third
party’s presence is "related to the objectives of the authorized
intrusion." Id. at 611. This is far from a flat rule against the
presence of civilians, and it is unclear how plaintiffs derive
the principle for which they argue.
The flaws of a per se rule against third-party entries
become evident when one considers how it would apply in
practice. There are innumerable situations where during a
home entry an emergency might require the presence of a per-
son who is not a police officer. Firefighters must enter a home
HUNSBERGER v. WOOD 5
to battle a blaze. Michigan v. Tyler, 436 U.S. 499 (1978).
Someone who is a doctor or nurse or a lay person who knows
how to administer first-aid might provide critical medical ser-
vices to persons injured in their homes. Explosive experts
must enter dwellings to identify and disarm dangerous bombs.
Police officers often need property owners to identify their
belongings to determine whether they have been stolen. See,
e.g., Bellville v. Town of Northboro, 375 F.3d 25, 33 (1st Cir.
2004). Bystanders or neighbors sometimes need to assist offi-
cers in identifying a victim. Someone who speaks Spanish or
any number of languages might be required to translate during
the search of a home of someone who does not speak English.
These situations are absolutely legion, and cannot all be
resolved by some flat rule in advance. Instead, courts must
deal with them on a case-by-case basis, evaluating the justifi-
cation for the presence of the third party in light of the reason
for the entry. A per se rule would effectively overrule the Wil-
son case and would prevent police officers from seeking criti-
cal help from civilians during searches. In fact, the panel
explicitly adopted a narrow holding, tied closely to the facts,
to be elaborated only as specific cases and circumstances
arise.
The facts which I have recounted above in this case would
certainly have suggested to an objectively reasonable officer
that this teenage girl was not only missing but possibly hurt
and incapacitated. Not to belabor the point, but any parent
whose daughter was out after midnight, not answering her cell
phone, in a house where she was not supposed to be, in a
neighborhood where another residence had only recently
burned down, with her car blocking the road, etc. would be
alarmed, as plaintiffs admit Blessard was. And any reasonable
officer would have tried to help. Even adopting plaintiffs’
view that Wood expressly consented to Blessard’s presence,
as the panel’s opinion explicitly did, Wood acted reasonably.
It was reasonable for Wood to think that Blessard’s presence
in the home would be useful. The more quickly Wood could
identify NW, the more quickly he could determine whether
6 HUNSBERGER v. WOOD
she needed assistance. And if she was frightened and hiding
in the home, the one thing she might respond to was a par-
ent’s reassuring voice. If the missing NW was being held
against her will, she might well answer a parent, but not a
stranger.
Even to this day, plaintiffs have not suggested any remotely
practical course of action Wood should have pursued. Wood
could have entered alone and asked any girl he encountered
to identify herself. But he had no guarantee of getting an
answer, much less a truthful one. He wasn’t even sure the
missing girl was conscious or hadn’t passed out. He could
have required any girl who was possibly the missing NW to
come outside in the dark after midnight to be identified by
Blessard, but such a procedure would be more traumatic to
young girls than the one actually used. Further, these alterna-
tives would have been time-consuming, and time was one
thing this officer did not have a whole lot of. It’s always
tempting to go the could-have/should-have route in hindsight,
but that is not how the Supreme Court has structured the
objective reasonableness inquiry. If a unanimous panel of this
court believed upon reflection that Wood’s actions were rea-
sonable, how was he to figure otherwise in the fleeting min-
utes he had? We thankfully know now that NW is safe and
that the Hunsberger home was not vandalized or burned to the
ground. But no one knew at the time.
For these reasons and those expressed in the panel opinion,
I believe en banc review was properly denied.
DIANA GRIBBON MOTZ, Circuit Judge, dissenting from
the denial of rehearing en banc:
The Fourth Amendment to the Constitution of the United
States assures us that "[t]he right of the people to be secure
in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreason-
able searches and seizures, shall not be violated." U.S. Const.
amend. IV. Those words do not contain an idle promise or
HUNSBERGER v. WOOD 7
advance a novel proposition. Rather, they embody our coun-
try’s "centuries-old principle of respect for the privacy of the
home." Wilson v. Layne, 526 U.S. 603, 610 (1999). A panel
of this court has abandoned this time-honored promise to hold
that a police officer who, without warrant, searches a private
home in the middle of the night and allows a civilian to
accompany him does not—as a matter of law—violate the
Fourth Amendment. See Hunsberger v. Wood, 570 F.3d 546
(4th Cir. 2009). With deep regret, I dissent from the full
court’s refusal to consider this case en banc.
I.
On February 2, 2007, a neighbor of Cheryl and Mark Huns-
berger called 911 twice—first at ten in the evening and then
at midnight—to report cars coming from and going to, and
noise coming from, the Hunsberger family home. Because the
neighbor had not seen the Hunsbergers for a few days, she
believed this activity suspicious. Sergeant J.A. Wood and
Deputy Jody Edwards answered both 911 calls.
Responding to the first call, the officers found two cars
parked in front of the Hunsberger home; they did not regard
this suspicious and so left within five minutes. Responding to
the later call, the officers saw an additional car parked in front
of the house. Sgt. Wood contends that he saw lights turn off
inside the house, and he noticed an open garage door, which
had previously been closed. He maintains that he knocked and
rang the Hunsbergers’ doorbell repeatedly. (Six of the occu-
pants of the Hunsbergers’ home testified under oath that they
never heard any knock or doorbell. J.A. 67, 288-89, 762, 950,
1437-38, 1486.) Sgt. Wood acknowledges that he did not
attempt to telephone the Hunsbergers; instead, he contacted
the owners of the three cars parked in front of their house and,
speculating that teenagers—probably drinking—had driven
them, asked that the cars be retrieved. J.A. 1303-06, 1618,
1626.
8 HUNSBERGER v. WOOD
In response to Sgt. Wood’s call, William Blessard drove to
the Hunsbergers’ home; he told Sgt. Wood that his stepdaugh-
ter, who was supposed to be spending the night elsewhere,
had been driving one of the cars. The owners of the other two
cars arrived shortly thereafter and drove those cars away with-
out Sgt. Wood or Deputy Edwards questioning them at all.
Blessard called his stepdaughter’s cell phone, but she did not
answer.
Blessard and Sgt. Wood then approached the house, at
which point Sgt. Wood claims to have heard "something
being knocked over in the garage." Without calling for
backup, obtaining a search warrant, or attempting to telephone
the Hunsbergers, Sgt. Wood entered and conducted a search
of the entire three-story home. Although Sgt. Wood did not
find it necessary to ask Deputy Edwards, the other officer on
the scene, to accompany him, he did permit Blessard—an
untrained civilian—to join him inside the Hunsbergers’ home.
J.A. 406, 441, 1332-33, 1154-55. In the course of the search
(which yielded neither the stepdaughter nor any danger) Sgt.
Wood and Blessard questioned the Hunsbergers’ sixteen-year-
old son and then awakened their ten-year-old daughter. J.A.
432-33, 1343-53. As Sgt. Wood and Blessard pulled her cov-
ers down and shined a flashlight in her face, the young girl
began screaming. J.A. 950-51, 1486.
The Hunsbergers awoke to their child’s screams and dis-
covered two strange men in their home. J.A. 950. Dissatisfied
with the explanation that the two men had entered without a
warrant to search for Blessard’s stepdaughter, the Hunsber-
gers asked them to leave, which they did.1 After Sgt. Wood
and Blessard finally left, the police apparently engaged in no
further search for Blessard’s stepdaughter; Blessard explained
1
The Hunsbergers shortly thereafter discovered that their sons had
invited friends over; some of those friends (including the stepdaughter)
had been drinking and hid in the basement when the police arrived. All of
the friends safely returned to their homes that night.
HUNSBERGER v. WOOD 9
that he did not protest this inaction because, after all, "the law
is the law . . . . I mean, do you want to search every house
on the block?" J.A. 443.
The Hunsbergers brought this case, maintaining that in
entering and searching their home without a warrant and per-
mitting a civilian to participate in this unauthorized entry and
search, Sgt. Wood violated their Fourth Amendment right to
be free from unreasonable searches. The experienced district
judge denied Sgt. Wood’s motion for summary judgment. See
Hunsberger v. Wood, 564 F. Supp. 2d 559, 565-70 (W.D. Va.
2008). A panel of this court reversed, holding as a matter of
law that Sgt. Wood’s actions did not violate the Constitution.
The panel concluded that exigent circumstances not only
compelled Sgt. Wood to enter and search a family home with-
out a warrant in the middle of the night, but also allowed him
to permit a civilian to accompany him. See Hunsberger, 570
F.3d at 555–57.
II.
The panel’s holding permits what the Constitution prohib-
its. "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." Kyllo v. United
States, 533 U.S. 27, 31 (2001) (quoting Silverman v. United
States, 365 U.S. 505, 511 (1961)) (internal quotation marks
omitted). Indeed, "physical entry of the home is the chief evil
against which the wording of the Fourth Amendment is
directed." Payton v. New York, 445 U.S. 573, 585 (1980)
(quoting United States v. United States Dist. Court, 407 U.S.
297, 313 (1972)) (internal quotation marks omitted).
Courts are thus exceedingly reluctant to permit even
trained, professional police officers to cross the threshold into
a private home. See, e.g., Georgia v. Randolph, 547 U.S. 103
(2006); Mincey v. Arizona, 437 U.S. 385 (1978); Silverman,
365 U.S. 505. Of course, sometimes the sanctity of the home
10 HUNSBERGER v. WOOD
must yield to public interest; on those rare occasions, the
police may enter in order to execute a valid warrant. See Pay-
ton, 445 U.S. at 586.
But, with "few exceptions, the question whether a warrant-
less search of a home is reasonable and hence constitutional
must be answered no." Kyllo, 533 U.S. at 31. Exigent circum-
stances present one of these few exceptions. However, the cir-
cumstances must truly be exigent: this exception permits a
police officer to "enter a home without a warrant to render
emergency assistance to an injured occupant or to protect an
occupant from imminent injury." Brigham City v. Stuart, 547
U.S. 398, 403 (2006) (emphasis added); see also United
States v. Moss, 963 F.2d 673, 678 (4th Cir. 1992) ("[T]he
[officer] must have had an objectively reasonable belief that
an emergency existed that required immediate entry to render
assistance or prevent harm to persons or property within.").
As for civilians, even when a warrant sanctions the entry of
the police, "it is a violation of the Fourth Amendment for
police to bring . . . third parties into a home during the execu-
tion of a warrant when the presence of the third parties in the
home was not in aid of the execution of the warrant." Wilson,
526 U.S. at 614. When, as here, the police do not obtain a
warrant, any search is "circumscribed by the exigencies which
justify its initiation." Horton v. California, 496 U.S. 128,
139–40 (1990). It is difficult to imagine any exigency that
would compel an officer to allow a civilian into a private
home, particularly when another trained police officer was at
the scene and available to assist in remedying the asserted exi-
gency. In fact, prior to the panel’s decision, no court had ever
held that even truly exigent circumstances authorized a police
officer to permit an untrained civilian to participate in the
warrantless search of a private home. It seemed settled that
police officers "would never let a civilian into a home. . . .
That’s just not allowed." Wilson, 526 U.S. at 624 (Stevens, J.,
HUNSBERGER v. WOOD 11
concurring and dissenting in part) (quoting the sheriff who
supervised the defendant police officers).2
III.
A.
Although the panel holds Sgt. Wood’s warrantless search
of the Hunsbergers’ home justified as a reasonable response
to an emergency, Sgt. Wood’s own testimony clearly provides
a basis from which a fact finder could conclude that he did not
respond to an emergency. For Sgt. Wood testified that he
never requested backup, J.A. 1310; never asked for assistance
from Deputy Edwards, J.A. 1401; never unholstered his
weapon, J.A. 1329; and never even attempted to telephone the
Hunsbergers, J.A. 1364. The panel either ignores or trivializes
these facts. But considering them in the light most favorable
to the Hunsbergers (as we must at this stage), at the very least
they suggest a dispute as to whether Sgt. Wood had an objec-
tively reasonable belief that an emergency authorized his war-
rantless entry and search of a private home.3
2
In United States v. Sparks, 265 F.3d 825 (9th Cir. 2001), overruled on
other grounds by United States v. Grisel, 488 F.3d 844 (9th Cir. 2007), the
court considered whether an officer could allow a civilian to participate in
the warrantless search of a car. Even in this context, which involves a
much less potent privacy interest than a home, see South Dakota v. Opper-
man, 428 U.S. 364, 367 (1976), the court concluded that such civilian
involvement was not permitted unless the officer demonstrated that he was
"in need of assistance," i.e., that he could not safely summon another offi-
cer to help him or conduct the search by himself. See Sparks, 265 F.3d at
832. Sgt. Wood, of course, cannot meet even this standard, as he left
another officer, Deputy Edwards, outside while he searched the Hunsber-
gers’ home with Blessard.
3
The concurrence repeatedly notes that "two people fled the darkened
premises" as Sgt. Wood approached. This would be relevant, but of course
not dispositive, if Sgt. Wood saw people fleeing the "premises" prior to the
search. But the record contains no evidence that he did; Sgt. Wood cer-
tainly did not testify to such a sighting. No matter how compelling the
concurrence now finds this fact, it cannot retroactively provide any justifi-
12 HUNSBERGER v. WOOD
The panel not only ignores these critical facts, it also
attempts to draw support for its unprecedented holding from
markedly different cases in which officers entered a home to
break up a fight, Stuart, 547 U.S. at 406; to extinguish a fire,
Michigan v. Tyler, 436 U.S. 499, 509 (1978); to capture a
fleeing, armed suspect, Warden v. Hayden, 387 U.S. 294, 298
(1967); or to prevent the imminent destruction of evidence,
Ker v. California, 374 U.S. 23, 40 (1963). In each of those
cases, the officers had actual knowledge of an imminent threat
to life, property, or evidence. Sgt. Wood does not even claim
to have had such knowledge here. Accordingly, those cases
provide no support for the panel’s conclusion that exigent cir-
cumstances authorized Sgt. Wood’s entry and search of the
Hunsbergers’ home. "To put it simply, a burning building is
not the same as an open garage door in terms of the immedi-
acy of threat each presents." United States v. Bute, 43 F.3d
531, 538 (10th Cir. 1994).
B.
The panel follows its exigency ruling with a holding that
Wilson v. Layne—in which every member of the Supreme
Court agreed that the Constitution did not permit police, even
when executing a warrant, to allow third parties to accom-
pany them into a private home—somehow authorized Sgt.
Wood, acting without a warrant, to permit Blessard to enter
the Hunsbergers’ home. The panel rests this remarkable con-
clusion on Blessard’s ability to identify his stepdaughter,
which the panel (after a scant paragraph of analysis, see Hun-
sberger, 570 F.3d at 556-57) finds "related to the objectives
of the authorized intrusion." Id. at 556 (quoting Wilson, 526
U.S. at 611).
cation for Sgt. Wood’s decision to enter and search the Hunsbergers’
home. See Tennessee v. Garner, 471 U.S. 1, 26 (1985) (noting that "[t]he
clarity of hindsight cannot provide the standard for judging the reasonable-
ness of police decisions").
HUNSBERGER v. WOOD 13
In doing so, the panel wrenches the Wilson language from
its context. The sentence from which the panel selectively
quotes reads, in its entirety, "[w]hile this does not mean that
every police action while inside a home must be explicitly
authorized by the text of the warrant, the Fourth Amendment
does require that police actions in execution of a warrant be
related to the objectives of the authorized intrusion." Wilson,
526 U.S. at 611 (emphasis added) (citation omitted). Thus, the
Wilson Court specifically limited its observation to cases in
which the police secured a warrant; that, of course, never hap-
pened here. Given the disfavor accorded warrantless entries,
the panel’s failure even to acknowledge the critical difference
between this case and Wilson is telling—and deeply troubling.
Moreover, the panel ignores the fact that the Wilson Court
expressly rejected the several justifications offered by the
defendant police officers as to why the presence of civilians
–- in that case, reporters—was "related to" the execution of
the warrant. Id. at 614. The police in Wilson argued that they
should have discretion to determine when the presence of
reporters would further law enforcement interests, that media
ride-alongs facilitate accurate reporting about law enforce-
ment, and that the presence of reporters would curb police
misconduct and protect the safety of officers. Id. at 612-13. In
rejecting these arguments, the Supreme Court established that
the phrase "related to the objectives of the authorized intru-
sion," on which the panel so heavily relies, requires police
officers to do more than provide a post-hoc rationalization for
allowing a civilian to enter a private home.
Yet the panel’s holding that Blessard’s presence in the
Hunsberger’s home was "related to" Sgt. Wood’s response to
exigency rests on precisely this sort of post-hoc rationaliza-
tion, namely that Blessard’s ability to identify his stepdaugh-
ter assisted, and so is "related to," Sgt. Wood’s search.
Moreover, this rationalization is far weaker than those
rejected in Wilson because the record here contains substan-
tial evidence suggesting that Blessard’s "assistance" was nei-
14 HUNSBERGER v. WOOD
ther necessary nor solicited. Both Blessard and Sgt. Wood,
himself, offered testimony from which a fact finder could cer-
tainly conclude that Blessard did not enter the Hunsbergers’
home to assist Sgt. Wood, and Sgt. Wood did not allow Bles-
sard to join him for this purpose.4 For example, Blessard
swore under oath that when he entered the home, his "sole
purpose was to locate [his] step-daughter," that "Sergeant
Wood never invited or instructed [him] to enter the home,"
and that Sgt. Wood never even spoke to him during the
search. J.A. 403, 404, 406, 607-08. Rather, Blessard
explained, he "just mill[ed] around" the Hunsbergers’ home
on his own. J.A. 408.
Sgt. Wood similarly testified that at various points during
the search, he did not know where Blessard was, J.A. 1331,
1332-33, 1335, 1337-38, and that at no point did he "give[ ]
[Blessard] any instruction whatsoever." J.A. 1335. Sgt. Wood
explained that it would have been inappropriate for him to
request assistance from a civilian except in a serious emer-
gency, "like if you have a riot on the street." J.A. 1403-04. In
sum, both men repeatedly acknowledged that Sgt. Wood nei-
ther sought nor obtained Blessard’s entry into the Hunsber-
4
Even if Sgt. Wood and Blessard had acted in concert, the panel’s rea-
soning would fail because ascertaining a girl’s identity would not have
helped the police in saving her from imminent harm. If Sgt. Wood had
found a girl in the type of distress contemplated by "exigent
circumstances"—e.g., seriously ill or injured, or held against her will—the
girl’s identity would be irrelevant. In Moss, 963 F.2d at 679, we rejected
a federal officer’s contention that obtaining missing campers’ identifica-
tion in order to provide them medical aid justified the officer’s entry into
an empty cabin. We explained: "That a lost or injured or dead camper was
named John Doe rather than Richard Roe was a complete irrelevance to
[the officer’s] stated concern." Id. If Sgt. Wood had found several girls in
distress, the panel’s logic suggests that rather than help them all, he should
have identified Blessard’s stepdaughter and singled her out for aid. But,
of course, in an emergency, a police officer must assist any person in need.
Permitting Blessard to enter the Hunsbergers’ home was not even loosely
"related to" that duty.
HUNSBERGER v. WOOD 15
gers’ home in order to respond to a true emergency.5 A fact
finder could certainly credit their testimony on this point and
so reasonably conclude that Sgt. Wood’s actions—allowing
an untrained, unarmed civilian to mill around a private home,
at times unattended—were not "related to" any perceived
emergency occurring within the Hunsbergers’ home.
Thus, rather than supporting the panel’s view, Wilson
makes it clear that the Fourth Amendment prohibits a civil-
ian’s entry into a private home under these circumstances. As
we explained in Buonocore v. Harris, 65 F.3d 347, 356 (4th
Cir. 1995), "the Fourth Amendment prohibits government
agents" from "facilitat[ing]" an untrained civilian’s search of
a private home. (Even Blessard acknowledged this limitation.
See J.A. 443.)
IV.
If Sgt. Wood unjustifiably searched the Hunsbergers’ home
and allowed Blessard to accompany him in this search, as the
facts, viewed in the best light for the Hunsbergers, surely indi-
cate, Sgt. Wood clearly violated the Hunsbergers’ constitu-
tional rights. Of course, to recover money damages, the
5
The panel cautions against judging Sgt. Wood’s actions in hindsight,
but based on what he knew at the time, Sgt. Wood’s decision to allow
Blessard into the Hunsbergers’ home was not only unconstitutional, but
also unwise. Blessard is not a police officer trained to respond to crises as
a professional; he is a parent who was "worried sick" about his child. He
testified that he was "scared to death" for his stepdaughter’s safety as he
searched the home. It is sheer luck that when he encountered the Hunsber-
gers, neither Blessard nor the Hunsbergers—themselves overwrought by
the intrusion—attempted to take matters into their own hands. Many par-
ents would not have been so docile, and Sgt. Wood had no way of know-
ing how Blessard, whom he had just met, would fare in the home. If Sgt.
Wood truly believed that Blessard’s stepdaughter was in danger, then
allowing Blessard to enter the Hunsbergers’ home served only to inject
uncertainty and volatility into an already tense situation and expose every-
body in the house to additional risk. It is the panel that has viewed Sgt.
Wood’s actions in hindsight in its attempt to rationalize them.
16 HUNSBERGER v. WOOD
Hunsbergers will have to offer proof as to the harm they have
suffered, but they should be given an opportunity to do so.
See Hudson v. Michigan, 547 U.S. 586, 597-99 (2006) (noting
that money damages provide an important remedy for viola-
tions of the sanctity of the home).
For, after all, a police officer accompanied by an untrained
civilian entered the Hunsbergers’ home in the dead of night.
These men searched the entire house. They accosted the Hun-
sbergers’ children. If the sanctity of the home is to mean any-
thing, then the police must understand that they cannot use the
narrow doctrine of exigency as a crowbar to pry open our
homes to unnecessary intrusions.
Justice Kennedy put it well, recently noting that:
[P]rivacy and security in the home are central to the
Fourth Amendment’s guarantees as explained in our
decisions and as understood since the beginnings of
the Republic. This common understanding ensures
respect for the law and allegiance to our institutions,
and it is an instrument for transmitting our Constitu-
tion to later generations undiminished in meaning
and force. . . . [I]t is a serious matter if law enforce-
ment officers violate the sanctity of the home by
ignoring the requisites of lawful entry. Security must
not be subject to erosion by indifference or con-
tempt.
Hudson, 547 U.S. at 603 (Kennedy, J., concurring).
The panel’s holding works an injustice on the Hunsbergers
and creates an unsupportable and unsound precedent. I regret
that a majority of my colleagues have not seen fit to correct
this affront to the Constitution—and hope that another court
will do so.