Monthly Archives: July 2014

E.D.Mich.: Drug and firearm SW turned up surveillance system; looking at images on camera was reasonable; CP found

Officers had a drug and firearms search warrant, and found a surveillance system inside with a “control room.” They looked on the camera screen and immediately saw child pornography. They obtained a second warrant for that. The view of the … Continue reading

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Politico: President Barack Obama to issue executive order on drone privacy

Politico: President Barack Obama to issue executive order on drone privacy by Erin Mershon and Kevin Robillard: President Barack Obama plans to issue an executive order to develop privacy guidelines for commercial drones operating in U.S. airspace, POLITICO has learned.

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WaPo: White House and senators near deal on surveillance

WaPo: White House and senators near deal on surveillance by Ellen Nakashima: The Obama administration and key U.S. senators are close to a deal on legislation that aims to end the National Security Agency’s collection of millions of Americans’ phone … Continue reading

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NACDL White Paper: What’s Old is New Again: Retaining Fourth Amendment Protections in Warranted Digital Searches

NACDL White Paper: What’s Old is New Again: Retaining Fourth Amendment Protections in Warranted Digital Searches (news release)

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WA: Extracting blood is a search; testing blood is a second search

“The extraction of blood from a drunk driving suspect is a search. Testing the blood sample is a second search. It is distinct from the initial extraction because its purpose is to examine the personal information blood contains. We hold … Continue reading

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IN: Completely unjustified frisk suppressed

The officer in this case received word that defendant was a drug dealer, so he went around looking for defendant. He saw the defendant a couple of times but nothing was unusual or suggested a crime. Then he initiated a … Continue reading

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NYT: Prosecutors Are Reading Emails From Inmates to Lawyers

NYT: Prosecutors Are Reading Emails From Inmates to Lawyers by Stephanie Clifford: The extortion case against Thomas DiFiore, a reputed boss in the Bonanno crime family, encompassed thousands of pages of evidence, including surveillance photographs, cellphone and property records, and … Continue reading

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W.D.Pa.: No standing in CSLI of somebody else’s cell phone

A cell phone user has no reasonable expectation of privacy in cell site location data records kept by the telephone company of a telephone that he was using that he was not the subscriber to. United States v. Woodley, 2014 … Continue reading

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D.S.D.: Danger not defused, so officer could conduct frisk; it’s “akin to the doctrine of a ‘protective sweep'”

I’ve analogized a frisk of a car authorized under Long as a ‘protective sweep,’ which is usually of a dwelling. Here, a court does too: Officers responded to a use of force report that had been not completely defused. When … Continue reading

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D.Nev.: Jones GPS ruling is not retroactive on collateral review

United States v. Jones GPS ruling is not retroactive on collateral review. United States v. Wineman, 2014 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 98665 (D. Nev. February 27, 2014). Defendant’s stop was based on an unsubstantiated CI and there was no traffic offense. … Continue reading

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PA: Request for ID of two men sitting at a vacant building didn’t rise to a detention

Two men sitting at a vacant building in the daytime, but in an area known for burglaries, could be asked for identification and it written down. It was a mere encounter and not a detention. One defendant’s continued furtive conduct … Continue reading

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CA6: Heck bar doesn’t apply to third parties not in prior criminal case

One plaintiff’s complaint over his arrest was Heck barred, but third party Fourth Amendment claims were not. [This came up through a complex procedural issue.] Hayward v. Cleveland Clinic Found., 2014 U.S. App. LEXIS 13802, 2014 FED App. 0157P (6th … Continue reading

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E.D.Wis.: “‘Reliance on vague, conclusory allegations is insufficient’” to get a hearing on a motion to suppress

“‘Reliance on vague, conclusory allegations is insufficient’” to get a hearing on a motion to suppress. “Defendant correctly notes that the government bears the burden of justifying a warrantless search, but this does not relieve him of his burden of … Continue reading

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GA: Deliberately delaying the computer check during a traffic stop unreasonably extended it

The officer wrote a traffic ticket and then decided to run a computer check, and that unnecessarily prolonged the stop, making it unreasonable. State v. Allen, 2014 Ga. App. LEXIS 538 (July 16, 2014). Monitoring a controlled buy with the … Continue reading

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USA Today: Investigation: ATF drug stings targeted minorities

USA Today: Investigation: ATF drug stings targeted minorities by Brad Heath: The nation’s top gun-enforcement agency overwhelmingly targeted racial and ethnic minorities as it expanded its use of controversial drug sting operations, a USA TODAY investigation shows. The Bureau of … Continue reading

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The Atlantic: New Surveillance Whistleblower: The NSA Violates the Constitution

The Atlantic: New Surveillance Whistleblower: The NSA Violates the Constitution by Conor Friedersdorf: A former Obama administration official calls attention to unaccountable mass surveillance conducted under a 1981 executive order.

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NYTimes: Racy Photos Were Often Shared at N.S.A., Snowden Says

NYTimes: Racy Photos Were Often Shared at N.S.A., Snowden Says by Michael S. Schmidt: WASHINGTON — The former National Security Agency contractor Edward J. Snowden said in a wide-ranging interview published on Sunday that the oversight of surveillance programs was … Continue reading

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NJ: No violation of “neutral and detached magistrate” requirement where issuing magistrate didn’t remember prior prosecution of one defendant when an ADA

The judge issuing the search warrant here had, over six years earlier, as an ADA prosecuted one of the eight defendants in this case. He didn’t remember the case. When it was brought to his attention, he recused from the … Continue reading

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VI: The question is not whether the driver is guilty of a traffic offense, just whether there is RS

The officer stopped defendant because he swerved, and defendant claimed it was because he was avoiding a pedestrian. The government isn’t required to prove that it was true or not; the question is reasonable suspicion of bad driving, and it … Continue reading

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S.D.N.Y.: SW for email account can be for all emails, disagreeing with D.D.C.

Disagreeing with a USMJ for the District Court for District of Columbia, a USMJ in the Southern District of New York held that an entire email account can be the subject of a search warrant, not just itemized files. The … Continue reading

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