Daily Archives: December 7, 2015

Police News: How SCOTUS impacted policing in 2015

Police News: How SCOTUS impacted policing in 2015 by Terrence P. Dwyer: The Court has said reasonableness does not require perfection, but it does require a plausible satisfaction of Fourth Amendment criteria.

Posted in SCOTUS | Comments Off on Police News: How SCOTUS impacted policing in 2015

D.Minn.: Computer could be seized and searched as a condition of supervised release

Defendant was indicted and convicted in federal court in Georgia, but he was on bond pending appeal in Minnesota. As a condition of his supervised release, his computers were subject to inspection. Based on certain admissions, USPO seized his computer … Continue reading

Posted in Computer and cloud searches, Probation / Parole search | Comments Off on D.Minn.: Computer could be seized and searched as a condition of supervised release

N.D.Ga.: Where SW issued by video conference, lack of record of conference leaves gov’t with “four corners” of application; no suppression

The state officer here applied for a search warrant by video conference and either email or fax of the documents (the opinion doesn’t say how the judge had them) as permitted under Georgia statute. There was no recording made of … Continue reading

Posted in Burden of proof, Warrant requirement | Comments Off on N.D.Ga.: Where SW issued by video conference, lack of record of conference leaves gov’t with “four corners” of application; no suppression

S.D.N.Y.: “Under ordinary circumstances, drawing weapons and using handcuffs are not part of a Terry stop,” but the totality of the circumstances here justified it

“Under ordinary circumstances, drawing weapons and using handcuffs are not part of a Terry stop,” but the totality of the circumstances can justify it. Here, it did. Defendants were stopped on a rural road with reasonable suspicion. Although a frisk … Continue reading

Posted in Reasonableness, Stop and frisk | Comments Off on S.D.N.Y.: “Under ordinary circumstances, drawing weapons and using handcuffs are not part of a Terry stop,” but the totality of the circumstances here justified it

AR: Consent to a blood draw waives statutory requirement doctor or nurse do it

When a defendant in a DUI negligent homicide case consents to a blood draw, it doesn’t matter that the sample wasn’t drawn by a nurse or a doctor. Here it was a lab technician, and the results were admissible. Roe … Continue reading

Posted in Consent, Ineffective assistance | Comments Off on AR: Consent to a blood draw waives statutory requirement doctor or nurse do it

PA: In a child murder case, the police entry merely to look for other children in the home did not taint subsequent SW

Defendant was sentenced to death for murder of a two-year old boy. On the search issue, officers entered the house only to see if there was another child in the house that he was caring for. They came back with … Continue reading

Posted in Independent source | Comments Off on PA: In a child murder case, the police entry merely to look for other children in the home did not taint subsequent SW