Daily Archives: August 26, 2015

CA11: Wife having computer password showed her apparent authority over it

It was reasonable for police to believe that defendant’s wife had apparent authority to consent to providing the password to them to search his laptop. He argued that he gave it for the limited purpose of fixing a printer problem, … Continue reading

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The Guardian: Digital surveillance ‘worse than Orwell’, says new UN privacy chief

The Guardian: Digital surveillance ‘worse than Orwell’, says new UN privacy chief by Adam Alexander Joseph Cannataci describes British oversight as ‘a joke’ and says a Geneva convention for the internet is needed.

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HuffPo: Roadside Strip Searches and Other Police State Indignities

HuffPo: Roadside Strip Searches and Other Police State Indignities by John W. Whitehead. (The URL says “the raping of america roa”)

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M.D.La.: Search incident couldn’t be used to justify search here days after the controlled buy that gave cause

The search incident doctrine can’t be used to justify a search incident to a warrantless arrest days after the event that gave the probable cause. The arrest can’t be manipulated like that. An arrest warrant could certainly have issued, but … Continue reading

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UT: While bank records are constitutionally private, once properly disclosed in an investigation, privacy is gone

Bank records of a nonprofit allegedly funneling money to candidates for office were subpoenaed by the state, but no prosecution was brought. Then a public records request was filed for the bank records. There was no overriding privacy interest in … Continue reading

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