If the door is OPEN, they have a requirement to go in and check what's going on. You want a head story on tomorrow's paper abouta family that was gunned down, cops walked by an open door, and no one checked it out?
Did they use that law for that purpose or to look up the marijuana? Well duh. But they're well within their rights.
And next time, put down the bong and start drinking tea and hot chocolate to relax yourself. They're legal.
r
You're getting things confused. The door being open doesn't make a difference, unless the officers see dead bodies or someone dying or being attacked through that opened door.
The "legalese" is important in law. The police need more than a "suspicion" that an individual is in need of emergency aid. They need more than a "hunch" to get beyond the warrant requirement of the 4th Amendment. If they hear gunshots or screams, or see someone hurt or being attacked they can go in pursuant to the emergency aid exception. Otherwise, they need to get a warrant. The police were not "well within their rights" in this situation.