Category Archives: SCOTUS

WaPo: Explaining Heien and Rodriguez

WaPo: Explaining Heien and Rodriguez by Orin Kerr: Over at Slate, Mark Joseph Stern has an article trying to explain the Justices’ votes in Rodriguez v. United States, yesterday’s Fourth Amendment case on the length of traffic stops. Stern focuses … Continue reading

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Big win for individual liberty: SCOTUS: Bringing out the drug dog as a matter of course during a traffic stop is unreasonable; CA8’s “de minimus” extension of stop rule violates Fourth Amendment

Rodriguez v. United States, 2015 U.S. LEXIS 2807 (April 21, 2015). The syllabus: Officer Struble, a K–9 officer, stopped petitioner Rodriguez for driving on a highway shoulder, a violation of Nebraska law. After Struble attended to everything relating to the … Continue reading

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SCOTUS per curiam: Grady v. North Carolina: Satellite based monitoring of sex offenders implicates the Fourth Amendment; reversed for reconsideration under Jones

North Carolina’s satellite based monitoring (SBM) of sex offenders is designed to effect a government search of the location of sex offenders under Jones. It matters not that it is in the context of a civil case. The state court … Continue reading

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SCOTUSBlog: Argument preview: Police and disability rights

SCOTUSBlog: Argument preview: Police and disability rights (Argued March 23) by Lyle Denniston: Background Difficult issues of police policy and humane concern confront officers when they attempt to subdue a mentally disabled person whom they know is armed and has … Continue reading

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SCOTUSBlog: Argument summary: How does requiring a warrant interfere with surprise police searches of hotel guest registers?

SCOTUSBlog: Argument summary: How does requiring a warrant interfere with surprise police searches of hotel guest registers? by Rory Little: The first case argued Tuesday morning, City of Los Angeles v. Patel, was about whether a Los Angeles ordinance that … Continue reading

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SCOTYSBlog: Argument preview: Hotel guest registers and the Fourth Amendment – harder than it looks?

SCOTYSBlog: Argument preview: Hotel guest registers and the Fourth Amendment – harder than it looks? by Rory Little: Tuesday’s argument in City of Los Angeles v. Patel, a Fourth Amendment case, presents a particularly difficult example of a common Supreme … Continue reading

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