Daily Archives: June 27, 2014

WaPo: How accurate are historical cell-site records?

WaPo: How accurate are historical cell-site records? by Orin Kerr: Not very accurate, says Douglas Starr over at The New Yorker. An excerpt: If I make a cell call from Kenmore Square, in my home town of Boston, you might … Continue reading

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NYTimes: Facebook Bid to Shield Data From the Law Fails, So Far

NYTimes: Facebook Bid to Shield Data From the Law Fails, So Far by Vindu Goel and James C. McKinley Jr.: In confidential legal documents unsealed on Wednesday, Facebook argues that Manhattan prosecutors last summer violated the constitutional right of its … Continue reading

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Texas Lawyer: Talk to the Hand: Defense Seeks to Dismiss Lawsuit Alleging Recording of Attorney-Client Jailhouse Phone Calls

Texas Lawyer: Talk to the Hand: Defense Seeks to Dismiss Lawsuit Alleging Recording of Attorney-Client Jailhouse Phone Calls by Angela Morris: “The plaintiffs who are lawyers claiming to represent inmates in the Travis County detention facilities lack standing to assert … Continue reading

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TN: Consent not invalid for threat of SW that was with PC; also exclusionary rule doesn’t apply to probation revo

The request for consent here was not backed by a baseless threat to get a search warrant because the officers had probable cause. Here, however, this was a probation revocation, and the exclusionary rule wouldn’t apply. State v. Fife, 2014 … Continue reading

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E.D.Tenn.: The day after Riley, Davis GFE saves a warrantless cell phone search despite no controlling case; this is just wrong

In February, the USMJ found the warrantless search of defendant’s cell phone unreasonable, but in Davis good faith [despite the lack of controlling law in support?]. The day after Riley, the USDJ finds that the search of a cell phone … Continue reading

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OH10: Suppression motion arguing stop wasn’t valid doesn’t include whether frisk was reasonable; waived on appeal

The suppression argument that the stop was invalid doesn’t raise the issue of whether the frisk of defendant’s person was reasonable. Therefore, the frisk issue isn’t before the appeals court. Defendant even objected to testimony about the frisk. [¶ 10] … Continue reading

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FL2: Order to truant to empty pockets was a full search that was unreasonable here

While an officer can patdown a truant before putting him in the police car, a full search is unauthorized without probable cause. Order to empty pockets was a full search. R.A.S. v. State, 2014 Fla. App. LEXIS 9575 (Fla. 2d … Continue reading

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