Welcome to Federal Lawyers. Our goal is answering the question behind the question. If you’re searching “FBI broke down my door,” you’re focused on the wrong moment. The broken door feels like the most important thing that just happened. The trauma. The shock. The obvious violation of everything you thought the law protected. That door should matter. It doesn’t.
Here’s what defense attorneys know that changes everything about what just happened: since 2006, the way the FBI entered your home has almost no impact on whether they keep what they found inside. Hudson v. Michigan eliminated the suppression remedy for knock-and-announce violations. Even if agents violated every protocol – didn’t knock properly, didn’t wait long enough, broke down your door without legal justification – the evidence they seized is still fully admissible in court. The broken door gives you a possible civil lawsuit. It does NOT give you a criminal defense. You’re focused on how they entered. Prosecutors are focused on what they took.
But here’s what makes this even more devastating. The Supreme Court’s ruling in Hudson v. Michigan didn’t just eliminate the remedy. It eliminated the deterrent. Before 2006, police departments had reason to follow knock-and-announce rules because evidence could be suppressed if they didn’t. After Hudson, there’s no criminal consequence for breaking down your door improperly. You have a constitutional right to proper announcement. Wilson v. Arkansas (1995) established that. But the enforcement mechanism was gutted eleven years later. You have a right that exists only on paper – violated constantly with zero criminal consequences.
The Violation That Doesn’t Help You
Lets talk about what Hudson v. Michigan actualy did to your situation.
The knock-and-announce rule has existed for centuries. Common law required officers to announce there presence and give occupants time to open the door before forcing entry. The Fourth Amendment incorporated this principle. Wilson v. Arkansas confirmed it. You have a constitutional right to have agents knock, announce themselfs, and wait a reasonable time before breaking down your door.
But heres the paradox created by Hudson. The Supreme Court acknowledged the knock-and-announce rule is a Fourth Amendment requirement. Then it said violating that requirement dosent mean evidence gets suppressed. The Court argued that the interests protected by knock-and-announce – human life, property preservation, privacy, dignity – have nothing to do with the seizure of evidence itself. The evidence would have been found anyway. The violation only affected HOW it was found.
Think about what this means. FBI agents can show up at your door at 6 AM. They can yell police search warrant while already swinging the battering ram. They can break down your door before you even process what there saying. Every item they seize inside is still admissable. The warrant authorized them to search. The knock-and-announce violation was just a procedural defect in how they began that search. Your broken door is evidence of a constitutional violation. But the drugs, documents, or computers they found behind that door come into court anyway.
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(212) 300-5196Heres what Federal Lawyers explains to every client in this situation: the broken door creates two seperate legal battles. One is criminal – wheather the evidence they seized can be used against you. Hudson says it can. The other is civil – wheather you can sue for damages from the improper entry. These are completly different proceedings with different standards and different outcomes. Winning the civil battle dosent help you win the criminal one.
The violation of how they entered does not affect whether they keep what they found.
15 Seconds Between Knock And Splinters
How long does the FBI have to wait between knocking and breaking down your door? The answer is shorter then you think.
The Federal Law Enforcement Training Centers knock-and-announce guidance explains the legal standards. United States v. Banks (2003) established that 15 to 20 seconds is a reasonable wait time before forced entry when executing a search warrant. Thats the standard. Less then half a minute between police search warrant and your door splintering. 15 seconds for you to process whats happening. To get out of bed. To find clothes. To get to the door. To look through the peephole. To verify there actualy law enforcement. All of that in 15 seconds.
Todd Spodek
Lead Attorney & Founder
Featured on Netflix's "Inventing Anna," Todd Spodek brings decades of high-stakes criminal defense experience. His aggressive approach has secured dismissals and acquittals in cases others deemed unwinnable.
Most people cant even find there pants in 15 seconds. Most people cant fully wake up from sleep in 15 seconds. Most people cant get from the back bedroom to the front door in 15 seconds. But thats the legal standard. If the FBI knocked, announced, and waited 15-20 seconds with no response, the forced entry is presumptively reasonable. No knock-and-announce violation. No constitutional issue. Your door is just… gone.

You're woken at 5:45 AM by a deafening crash as FBI agents use a battering ram to force open your front door, flooding your home with flashlights and shouted commands. Your spouse and children are screaming in the hallway as agents in tactical gear order everyone to the floor while they begin searching every room.
Was the FBI legally allowed to break down my door without warning, and can I challenge the search or get my case thrown out because of how they entered?
Under the Fourth Amendment, federal agents generally need a valid search warrant signed by a judge to enter your home, but the 'knock and announce' requirement from Wilson v. Arkansas (1995) can be bypassed if agents obtained a 'no-knock' provision in the warrant or if they claimed exigent circumstances such as the risk of evidence destruction. However, in Hudson v. Michigan (2006), the Supreme Court ruled that even violations of the knock-and-announce rule do not automatically require suppression of the evidence found inside. Your attorney should immediately obtain copies of the warrant and supporting affidavit to scrutinize the probable cause, the scope of what agents were authorized to search, and whether a no-knock entry was actually justified. If the warrant was deficient or the agents exceeded its scope, a motion to suppress under the exclusionary rule could weaken or dismantle the government's entire case against you.
This is general information only. Contact us for advice specific to your situation.
Heres why this matters for your case. Even if you think the FBI didnt wait long enough, the standard is 15-20 seconds. If there was any possibility of evidence destruction – if the warrant was for drugs, documents, or anything that could be flushed or shredded – courts may approve even shorter wait times. The exigent circumstances exception allows immediate forced entry when evidence destruction is likely. The 15-second window can shrink to zero.
And even if they violated the wait time, remember Hudson. Even if they should have waited 15 seconds and waited only 5. Even if they yelled police as they were already breaking down the door. The evidence is still admissable. Your argument about the timing becomes a footnote in a civil lawsuit, not a defense in your criminal case.