Monthly Archives: September 2014

Tenth Amendment Center: Fourth Amendment: The History Behind “Unreasonable”

Tenth Amendment Center: Fourth Amendment: The History Behind “Unreasonable” by Mike Meharrey: The Fourth Amendment prohibits violations of our privacy and our person from unreasonable infringement by federal agents. The founding generation had a pretty clear idea of what constituted … Continue reading

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DC: Mere open container violation does not support a search incident of a car

Mere open container violation does not support a search incident of a car without more. United States v. Nash, 2014 D.C. App. LEXIS 393 (September 25, 2014): Second, the United States cites numerous decisions upholding automobile searches for additional evidence … Continue reading

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W.D.Tex.: Meth torch on front seat added to RS to prolong stop

A torch commonly used by methamphetamine users on the front seat next to the defendant and other things developed during questioning justified prolonging the stop. Also, defendant had a Canadian DL and it couldn’t be accessed through NCIC, and a … Continue reading

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D.Md.: GPS order could include rental cars for up to 60 days

A GPS warrant could issue for future rental vehicles for a fixed time frame. Defendant used weekly rented rental vehicles to transport drugs and there was no way of predicting what his next vehicle would be. United States v. Miller, … Continue reading

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MO: [Like hundreds of other cases,] Furtive movement to passenger seat during stop justifies longer detention

Defendant’s traffic stop had a factual basis, and his furtive movements to the passenger seat made a slightly longer investigative detention valid. State v. Perry, 2014 Mo. App. LEXIS 1040 (September 23, 2014). An officer and a CPS worker came … Continue reading

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GA: The mere presence of some papers of the defendant in the place searched doesn’t confer standing

The mere presence of some papers of the defendant in the place searched doesn’t confer standing. There was no testimony that he was otherwise connected to the property as owner, lessee, or guest. “The mere presence of miscellaneous papers bearing … Continue reading

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WaPo: Volokh: Julian Sanchez on encryption, law enforcement, and the balance of power

WaPo: Volokh: Julian Sanchez on encryption, law enforcement, and the balance of power by Orin Kerr: Over at Cato at Liberty, Julian Sanchez has an excellent post criticizing and responding to my three posts on encryption and the new Apple … Continue reading

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TN: No Davis GFE for pre-Jones GPS tracking in Tennessee

Pre-Jones installation of a GPS device not saved by a Davis-type good faith exception because Tennessee never adopted the good faith exception and there was no binding precedent from the state or SCOTUS on the issue. [Interesting discussion of the … Continue reading

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Sacramento Bee: Viewpoints: Police should get warrants for drones

Sacramento Bee: Viewpoints: Police should get warrants for drones by Erwin Chemerinsky: Gov. Jerry Brown should sign Assembly Bill 1327 to limit the ability of police in California to use drones to spy on people. The issue of police use … Continue reading

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NYTimes: Child Pornography Case Spurs Debate on Military’s Role in Law Enforcement

NYTimes: Child Pornography Case Spurs Debate on Military’s Role in Law Enforcement by Erik Eckholm and Richard A. Oppel Jr.: In a field office near Brunswick, Ga., a federal agent working as an undercover cybersleuth signed on to a large … Continue reading

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Global Research: Ronald Reagan’s Executive Order 12333: End-Running the Fourth Amendment; “Legalizing” Police State Surveillance

Global Research: Ronald Reagan’s Executive Order 12333: End-Running the Fourth Amendment; “Legalizing” Police State Surveillance by Peter Van Buren: Historians of the Constitutional Era of the United States (1789-2001, RIP) will recall the Fourth Amendment to the Constitution, the one … Continue reading

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OK: Cell phone search warrant based on prior invalid consent search suppressed; no GFE

The pre-Riley search warrant for defendant’s cell phone was based on an invalid consent search, and the good faith exception does not apply to warrants based on a prior illegal search. State v. Thomas, 2014 OK CR 12, 2014 Okla. … Continue reading

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CA6: Exigency supported seizure of animals from pet store, but not its records

Animal control officers seized animals and records from a pet store in Chattanooga for lack of water, food, and proper care. The animal seizure was valid and did not violate any clearly established right. The business record seizure, however, could … Continue reading

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E.D.Ky.: Drs body cavity search at hospital was private search not instigated by the police

Defendant was taken to the hospital for a medical emergency, and the doctor on his own did a search of the body. It was never asked for by the police, so it did not implicate the Fourth Amendment. This case … Continue reading

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NLJ: LEADS Act Would Limit Access to Data Stored Abroad

NJL: LEADS Act Would Limit Access to Data Stored Abroad: Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, and two of his Senate colleagues have delivered a morale boost to Microsoft Corp. in its battle against U.S. search warrants for user information stored overseas, … Continue reading

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NYTimes: Omnipresence: I’ll Be Watching You

NYTimes: Omnipresence: I’ll Be Watching You by Stephen Farrell: In the projects of Brownsville, Brooklyn, the New York Police Department’s new strategy, Omnipresence, is what it says. Despite promises of change, to some it feels like stop and frisk by … Continue reading

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PA: Nighttime entry onto the curtilage and then into the home for a stolen firearm wasn’t justified by exigency

Nighttime entry onto the curtilage and then into the home for a stolen firearm wasn’t justified by exigency. Suppression ordered. Commonwealth v. Bowmaster, 2014 PA Super 199, 2014 Pa. Super. LEXIS 2906 (September 17, 2014):

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KY: Cell phone was “pinged” because of missing kids but they were found; def’s location to arrest not suppressed

Defendant’s children were missing and his wife was murdered, and he was a suspect. Police got an exigent circumstances “ping” authority for 48 hours on his phone under the SCA. 18 U.S.C. § 2702(b-c). The phone was off and the … Continue reading

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N.D.Iowa: Dirty license plate justified stop even though it was called in during stop

Defendant’s stop for having a dirty obscured license plate was justified even though the officer was able to call it in when parked right behind him. The butt of a shotgun was visible in the vehicle and defendant was a … Continue reading

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OH12: Putting somebody in the back of a police car and Mirandizing them isn’t automatically an arrest

Putting somebody in the back of a police car and Mirandizing them isn’t automatically an arrest. State v. Babineau, 2014-Ohio-3999, 2014 Ohio App. LEXIS 3902 (12th Dist. September 15, 2014) A jury’s verdict of $250 for a stop for touching … Continue reading

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