Monthly Archives: October 2015

MA: Def readily submitted to arrest and came out; entry for protective sweep not reasonably justified

Defendant readily submitted to the police and came outside to be arrested. While the arrest warrant was for a defaced firearm, a protective sweep on that basis alone was unreasonable. Commonwealth v. Colon, 2015 Mass. App. LEXIS 171 (Oct. 26, … Continue reading

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The Hill: Poll: Overwhelming majority want police to wear body cameras

The Hill: Poll: Overwhelming majority want police to wear body cameras by By Lydia Wheeler: The majority of Americans support body cameras for police officers but say there needs to be clear rules on how the cameras and the footage … Continue reading

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NYLJ: Judge Grapples With Request for Apple to Decrypt iPhone

NYLJ: Judge Grapples With Request for Apple to Decrypt iPhone by Andrew Keshner: A federal magistrate judge had tough questions Monday for Apple Inc. and federal prosecutors on whether he should compel the technology giant to disable the security features … Continue reading

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The Guardian: IRS possessed Stingray cellphone surveillance gear, documents reveal

The Guardian: IRS possessed Stingray cellphone surveillance gear, documents reveal by Nicky Wolff and William Green: The Internal Revenue Service is the latest in a growing list of US federal agencies known to have possessed the sophisticated cellphone dragnet equipment … Continue reading

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CA4: Defendant revoked his consent to search his car, but officers did not stop searching; suppressed

Defendant was stopped for a traffic offense and received no ticket. The officer pulled the Columbo gambit of starting back to his car and “asked him if he would answer ‘a couple of questions real quick.’” Defendant consented and four … Continue reading

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NYTimes: The Disproportionate Risks of Driving While Black

NYTimes: The Disproportionate Risks of Driving While Black by Sharon LaFraniere and Andrew W. Lehren: An examination of traffic stops and arrests in Greensboro, N.C., uncovered wide racial differences in measure after measure of police conduct.

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WY: Reaching in pocket of detained motorist having seizure was reasonable under community caretaking function

Defendant was stopped for a traffic offense and had a seizure. The officer reached into his pocket to look for medication and discovered marijuana. The search was valid under the community caretaking function. Allgier v. State, 2015 WY 137, 2015 … Continue reading

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OR: Suspicion of being under the influence of a stimulant was exigency for warrantless UA

There were exigent circumstances for a warrantless UA of the defendant because he was suspected to be under the influence of a stimulant that would dissipate more rapidly than alcohol. State v. Raymond, 274 Ore. App. 409, 2015 Ore. App. … Continue reading

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D.Md.: Another NSA suit fails for lack of standing under Clapper

In another case against the NSA, plaintiffs can’t show standing under Clapper because the injury is speculative because the NSA doesn’t tell us what it’s doing, so the case is dismissed. Wikimedia Foundation v. National Security Agency Central Security Service, … Continue reading

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D.C.Cir.: Bivens does not apply to claims about extraterritorial torture

Bivens does not apply to claims about extraterritorial torture. Meshal v. Higgenbotham, 2015 U.S. App. LEXIS 18453 (D.C.Cir. Oct. 23, 2015):

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D.Minn.: Backseat passenger of driver doing hand-to-hand transactions subject to frisk

The driver of the car defendant was a backseat passenger in conducted hand-to-hand transactions, and that give probable cause for a search of the car by the automobile exception. The search of the backseat passenger was valid as a frisk … Continue reading

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D.Minn.: The common law “in the presence of” requirement for a warrantless misdemeanor arrest is not part of the Fourth Amendment

The common law “in the presence of” requirement for a warrantless misdemeanor arrest is not part of the Fourth Amendment. Here, the defendant was in the presence of the officer when the facts gave the officer probable cause that the … Continue reading

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OH9: Ordering a person out of a car at gunpoint after a stop is a seizure

Ordering a person out of a car at gunpoint after a stop is a seizure even if based on an alleged furtive movement. The stop was based on a robbery report, and this vehicle was more than a half mile … Continue reading

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M.D.Fla.: Email SWs are almost never stale; the email is always there

Staleness as to an email search warrant is hard to prove. It’s always going to be on the email provider’s server. United States v. Khateeb, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 143007 (M.D.Fla. Aug. 4, 2015). Defense counsel was not ineffective for … Continue reading

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Cal.1: Juvenile probation order to disclose all electronic passwords was overbroad

Juvenile probation order to disclose all electronic passwords was overbroad, following other recent cases. In re Ricardo P., 2015 Cal. App. LEXIS 931 (1st Dist. Oct. 22, 2015):

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M.D.Fla.: When a storage unit’s lease is up and notice of sale has been published, no REP exists

When the lease on a storage unit is over and the landlord has published a notice of sale of the contents, the reasonable expectation of privacy is lost. The landlord is in control. Similarly, as to warehouse space, the tenants … Continue reading

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S.D.Ala.: The known CI’s staying involved in the operation supported credibility because it was against penal interest

“It is unnecessary to identify the bare minimum required for an informant’s tip to support reasonable suspicion, because the circumstances of this case rise far above that threshold, and the question is not at all close. Laffitte did not receive … Continue reading

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OK: Refusal to consent as evidence subject to harmless error

Admission of defendant’s refusal to consent to a search in this capital case was error, but it was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt on the whole record. The court provides a comprehensive review of state cases on the subject of … Continue reading

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CA2: Ptfs consented to x-ray of car at Niagara Falls border station

Plaintiffs filed a § 1983 case over having their car x-rayed at Niagara Falls. They were given a choice of consent to the x-ray or waiting for a warrant, and they consented. That was not involuntary consent, and the jury … Continue reading

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CA1: CI corroborated by two observed controlled buys

The CI was already corroborated by database searches that her basic information about defendant was correct [which isn’t saying much], but the real corroboration was the officer observing two controlled buys from the defendant. United States v. White, 2015 U.S. … Continue reading

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