Daily Archives: April 18, 2014

KY: Judge who signed the SW is not automatically disqualified from hearing the motion to suppress

The judge who signed the search warrant is not automatically disqualified from hearing the motion to suppress by the Canons of Judicial Ethics and the “appearance of impropriety” standard. There might be cases where the facts would support it, but … Continue reading

Posted in Motion to suppress | Comments Off on KY: Judge who signed the SW is not automatically disqualified from hearing the motion to suppress

WA: Being an MMJ patient doesn’t negate PC for SW for grow operation

Whether the target of a search is a medical marijuana patient is an affirmative defense at trial. Therefore, it doesn’t factor into the probable cause determination. State v. Reis, 2014 Wash. App. LEXIS 759 (March 31, 2014). Defendant was arrested … Continue reading

Posted in Emergency / exigency, Probable cause | Comments Off on WA: Being an MMJ patient doesn’t negate PC for SW for grow operation

Cal.1st: Unverified report student shot another on a school bus the day before justified a locker search that found a sawed-off shotgun

The search of the juvenile’s school locker was validly based on an unverified report that he shot somebody on a school bus the day before. It was reasonable for the school officials to act on that information. A sawed-off shotgun … Continue reading

Posted in School searches | Comments Off on Cal.1st: Unverified report student shot another on a school bus the day before justified a locker search that found a sawed-off shotgun

D.Ariz.: Airport TSA “screenings” are “searches” within the Fourth Amendment and the FTCA

Airport TSA “screenings” are “searches” within the Fourth Amendment and the FTCA because they can search people and their belongings and then seize things. Here, however, plaintiff doesn’t state a claim. Armato v. Jane Doe 1, 2012 U.S. Dist. LEXIS … Continue reading

Posted in Airport searches | Comments Off on D.Ariz.: Airport TSA “screenings” are “searches” within the Fourth Amendment and the FTCA