Category Archives: Attenuation

W.D.La.: License plate reader results became a factor in RS analysis

In an alien smuggling case, aside from all the normal factors of nervousness and not knowing the passenger’s names who had no luggage who he professed were friends, one factor in the reasonable suspicion in this case was the police … Continue reading

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OR: Continuing stop that led to a patdown was unreasonable

Defendant was stopped for a traffic offense, but the officer was more concerned about the passenger being involved in identity theft. After the traffic offense was resolved and the passenger was going to drive, the officer got consent to a … Continue reading

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DC: 2009 consent was attenuated from 2007 search

2009 consent was attenuated from 2007 search. Dawkins v. United States, 12-CO-1648, 2015 D.C. App. LEXIS __ (February 5, 2015), prior appeal 41 A.3d 1265, 1272-73 (D.C. 2012). Considering in detail all the evidence in the case, the court finds … Continue reading

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S.D.Tex.: Ignoring a Border Patrol officer near the border is a factor in reasonable suspicion of alien smuggling

Ignoring a Border Patrol officer near the border is a factor in reasonable suspicion of alien smuggling. United States v. Juarez-Olmedo, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12167 (S.D.Tex. February 3, 2015). The officer was responding to a shots fired call at … Continue reading

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NV: Holding a pedestrian’s ID too long became an illegal detention; checking warrants became unreasonable

Holding a pedestrian’s ID too long constitutes an unreasonable seizure. Here, the officer promptly dispelled any reason for the stop, but holding on to the ID extended the stop. Then he sought warrants on the defendant, finding one, and the … Continue reading

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OH9: One day delay in getting cell phone SW after exigent based seizure not unreasonable

Police seized defendant’s phone because of suspected child pornography on it. The warrant to search the phone was not issued until the following day. Defendant cites no authority that a one day delay was unreasonable. State v. Welch, 2015-Ohio-284, 2015 … Continue reading

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CA5: Unsolicited consent to search cell phone dissipated taint of unlawful detention

Even assuming, without deciding, a constitutional violation in the length of defendant’s detention, his unsolicited offer to have the police search his cell phone dissipated any taint and attenuated the cell phone search from the detention. United States v. Montgomery, … Continue reading

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D.V.I.: Ordering defendant out of his house with guns drawn constitutes a constructive arrest in the home

Ordering defendant out of his house with guns drawn constitutes a constructive arrest in the home. His later consent to search it, however, was found attenuated. United States v. Bailey, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7851 (D.V.I. January 23, 2015): Further, … Continue reading

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UT: Attenuation doctrine must ultimately bottom on inevitable discovery

Under the attenuation doctrine, incorporating a proximate cause analysis, inevitable discovery must ultimately control where there is both lawful and unlawful police action. State v. Strieff, 2015 UT 2, 2015 Utah LEXIS 4 (January 16, 2015):

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D.D.C.: Even if NSA captured def’s calls, search of laptop at LAX was attenuated and with RS

Defendant was charged with violating the trade embargo with Iran. The government refused to provide details of how it accessed telephone call information, the defendant asserting that the NSA must have captured his call information. Assuming, then, that the search … Continue reading

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NM: When dealing with attenuation of live witness testimony, the witness has to testify at the hearing

After affirmance and on remand of a granted motion to suppress the state raised a Ceccolini argument that live witness testimony is harder to attenuate [see Treatise § 10.12] via a motion to reconsider. The defense argued law of the … Continue reading

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OR follows Brown v. Illinois on attenuation

Oregon follows Brown v. Illinois on attenuation analysis. State v. Bailey, 356 Ore. 486, 2014 Ore. LEXIS 813 (November 6, 2014):

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