Daily Archives: August 17, 2015

S.D.N.Y.: Whether an apt building stairwell is a “public place” is unsettled law in NYS, so def’s stop not unreasonable under Heien

Whether an open container in an apartment building stairwell was done in a “public place” is not clear and is unsettled under New York law, so the officer’s detention of defendant on this ground was not objectively unreasonable under Heien … Continue reading

Posted in Reasonableness | Comments Off on S.D.N.Y.: Whether an apt building stairwell is a “public place” is unsettled law in NYS, so def’s stop not unreasonable under Heien

D.Kan.: LPN being unassigned was justification for a stop and then the use of a drug dog wasn’t unreasonable

Defendant’s stop was based on the LPN coming back “not assigned,” and then the officer smelled alcohol on him. The use of the drug dog during all this did not extend the stop and was not unreasonable. United States v. … Continue reading

Posted in Dog sniff, Reasonable suspicion | Comments Off on D.Kan.: LPN being unassigned was justification for a stop and then the use of a drug dog wasn’t unreasonable

CA10: Extended border search of truck that had been flagged was with RS

Defendant’s vehicle was subjected to a border search in February 2013 and an empty hidden compartment was found after a dog alert. That information was entered in the computer. In September, defendant came through the border twice, and a border … Continue reading

Posted in Border search, Franks doctrine | Comments Off on CA10: Extended border search of truck that had been flagged was with RS

The Hill: The quiet battle for privacy in the cloud

The Hill: The quiet battle for privacy in the cloud by Dan Horowitz: Why is the Second Circuit being forced to defend our electronic privacy and preserve an international agreement from the Obama administration? Recently, a Federal Judge in New … Continue reading

Posted in E-mail, ECPA, FISA | Comments Off on The Hill: The quiet battle for privacy in the cloud

FL3: 3-4 police vehicles blocking def and taking ID and car keys led to consent being involuntary

Defendant did not consent because of a show of authority. “Despite the fact that, in this instance, the police were polite and did not draw their weapons, there was nevertheless the appearance of police authority and the circumstances were coercive … Continue reading

Posted in Consent, Informant hearsay | Comments Off on FL3: 3-4 police vehicles blocking def and taking ID and car keys led to consent being involuntary