Daily Archives: April 22, 2014

NYT: Beleaguered Albuquerque Department Reports Another Fatal Shooting by Police

NYT: Beleaguered Albuquerque Department Reports Another Fatal Shooting by Police by Trip Jennings and Fernanda Santos: An Albuquerque police officer fatally shot a suspected car thief on Monday during a foot chase in which, officials said, the suspect pointed a … Continue reading

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BLT: DOJ Challenges Denial of Search Warrant for Email Account

BLT: DOJ Challenges Denial of Search Warrant for Email Account by Lee Tillman: Federal prosecutors are pushing back against U.S. District Magistrate Judge John Facciola, who says the government has repeatedly filed search warrant applications for electronic information that run … Continue reading

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Reflections on Navarette: What guards against fictitious police reports? Nothing, really

So, on reflection, what does Navarette do to guard against the fictitious 911 call that somebody was driving erratically to justify a stop? Absolutely nothing. In most all of the prior cases, the officer follows for a little while and … Continue reading

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SCOTUS decides Navarette: RS from a 911 call suggesting drunk driving

Navarette v. California 12–9490 (April 22, 2014). Syllabus: A California Highway Patrol officer stopped the pickup truck occupied by petitioners because it matched the description of a vehicle that a 911 caller had recently reported as having run her off … Continue reading

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AZ: GPS on another’s vehicle targeting def as driver gave standing; no GFE where no prior state authority

Officers placed a GPS on another person’s vehicle knowing that defendant would be driving it, and he was the target. That gave him standing. The good faith exception doesn’t apply because there was no binding state precedent that said GPS … Continue reading

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N.D.Ill.: Consent by person with apparent authority “trumped” defendant’s remote refusal

A woman answered the door at 10 am in a bathrobe, suggesting she lived there or at least spent the night. Further inquiry showed apparent authority. Her consent “trumped” defendant’s remote refusal. United States v. Terry, 2014 U.S. Dist. LEXIS … Continue reading

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E.D.N.C.: DNA swab a search; taking a second was reasonable here

The taking of DNA by a buccal swab is a search, and here it would be reasonable. While the defendant concedes he was at the scene, he didn’t stipulate the issue away, so the government gets another buccal swab for … Continue reading

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