Warrantless Arrest

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The passage discusses the different rules and circumstances governing warrantless arrests and searches under Philippine law.

The passage outlines three circumstances under which a warrantless arrest is lawful: 1) in flagrante delicto, 2) hot pursuit, and 3) when arresting an escaped prisoner.

For a search incidental to a lawful arrest to be valid, the search must be conducted at the time of arrest or immediately thereafter, and only at the place of arrest or premises under the suspect's control.

Warrantless Arrest & Search: A Police Primer

Under the Rules of Court, Rule 113, Section 5, a warrantless arrest, also
known as "citizens arrest," is lawful under three circumstances:
1. When, in the presence of the policeman, the person to
be arrested has committed, is actually committing, or is
attempting to commit an offense. This is the "in flagrante
delicto" rule.
2. When an offense has just been committed, and he has
probable cause to believe, based on personal knowledge of
facts or circumstances, that the person to be arrested has
committed it. This is the "hot pursuit" arrest rule.
3. When the person to be arrested is a prisoner who has
escaped from a penal establishment.
In flagrante delicto warrantless arrest should comply with the element
of immediacy between the time of the offense and the time of the arrest. For
example, in one case the Supreme Court held that when the warrantless
arrest was made three months after the crime was committed, the arrest was
unconstitutional and illegal.
If an accused is caught in flagrante delicto, the warrantless arrest is
lawful and the evidence obtained in a search incidental to the arrest is
admissible as evidence. One common example of a warrantless arrest is a
buybust operation.
An offense is committed in the presence or within the view of an officer
when the officer sees the offense, although at a distance; or hears the
disturbance that it creates and proceeds at once to the scene.
If the warrantless arrest turns out to be unlawful, still the court is
capable of assuming jurisdiction over the accused. Any objection to the
courts jurisdiction is waived, when the person arrested submits to
arraignment without any objection.
The test of in flagrante delicto arrest is that the suspect was acting
under circumstances reasonably tending to show that he has committed or is
about to commit a crime. Evidence of guilt is not necessary. It is enough if
there is probable cause. For example, if there was a prior arrangement to
deliver shabu inside a hotel, the immediate warrantless arrest of the accused
upon his entry in the hotel room is valid. By contrast, the discovery of
marked money on the accused does not justify a warrantless arrest.

Under the rule on "hot pursuit" arrest, the policeman should have
personal knowledge that the suspect committed the crime. The test is
probable cause, which the Supreme Court has defined as "an actual belief or
reasonable grounds of suspicion."
Under this rule, the policeman does not need to actually witness the
execution or acts constituting the offense. But he must have direct
knowledge, or view of the crime, right after its commission.
* Mentally disabled persons on emergency grounds.
* Arrest based on unreasonable suspicion.
The Constitution does not forbid warrantless search; it only forbids
unreasonable search. The Rules of Court, Rule 126, Section 13, allows a
warrantless search, provided it is incident to a lawful arrest. The law
provides: "A person lawfully arrested maybe searched for dangerous
weapons or anything which may have been used or constitute proof in the
commission of an offense without a search warrant."
To be valid, the search must have been conducted at about the time of
the arrest or immediately thereafter, and only at the place where the suspect
was arrested, or the premises or surroundings under his immediate control.
Any evidence obtained during an illegal search (even if it confirms
initial suspicion of felonious activity) is considered absolutely inadmissible for
any purpose in any proceeding, since it is considered to be the fruit of a
poisonous tree. Since the Anti-Wiretapping Law provides that an illegal
wiretap is inadmissible for any purpose in any proceeding, being the fruit of a
poisonous tree, do you wonder how the alleged Garci tape could be possibly
considered admissible? I wonder too.
A valid arrest must precede the search, not vice versa. One exception
to the rule on search is waiver by the suspect. For example, where the shabu
was discovered by virtue of a valid warrantless search, and the accused
himself freely gave his consent to the search, the prohibited drugs found as a
result were inadmissible as evidence.
Another example, is the stop-and-frisk rule. A warrantless search is
allowed if the officers had reasonable or probable cause to believe before the
search that either the motorist is a law offender, or that they did find the
evidence pertaining to the commission of a crime in the vehicle to be
searched. The rule for checkpoints is that the inspection of the vehicle should
be limited to a visual search. The vehicle itself should not be searched, and
its occupants should not be subjected to a body search.

* Seizure of prohibited articles in plain view. The seizure should comply


with the following requirements:
(1) A prior valid intrusion based on a valid warrantless
arrest, in which the police are legally present in the pursuit of
their official duties.
(2) The evidence was inadvertently discovered by the
police who had the right to be where they are.
(3) The evidence must be immediately apparent.
(4) Plain view justified mere seizure of evidence without
further search.
As a lawyer and a former RTC judge, I am a very strong law and-order
person. The people upholding law in society are policemen and therefore, all
doubts should be resolved in favor of the police. After all, the Rules of Court
provides for the disputable presumption that official duty has been regularly
performed.
I submit that it is not fair to demand that the police should risk their
very lives to uphold the rule of law, and yet should be held in low esteem by
people whose mission in life is to change or disregard the law, outside of
constitutional processes. Accordingly, as vice chair of the Senate Finance
Committee, I will file at the end of the Senate budget hearings, a motion to
appropriate the sum of R37 billion for the Philippine National Police.
* More firearms, both short and long; more radios, whether base,
mobile, or handheld.
It is not the guns or armament or the money they can pay. It is the
close cooperation that makes them win the day. It is not the individual or the
police as a whole but the everlasting teamwork.

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