Daily Archives: December 29, 2015

WaPo: Radley Balko’s ‘The Watch’ Blog – Federal judge: Drinking tea, shopping at a gardening store is probable cause for a SWAT raid on your home

WaPo: Radley Balko’s ‘The Watch’ Blog – Federal judge: Drinking tea, shopping at a gardening store is probable cause for a SWAT raid on your home: Yes, merely shopping at a gardening store could make you the target of a … Continue reading

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PA: Judge disciplined for not being “neutral and detached” in issuing SW, arrest warrant, and OP at request of friend against husband

Judge who issued a search warrant, arrest warrant, and order of protection on the request of a personal friend against the friend’s spouse was not being neutral and detached, and she was disciplined for violating Canon 2A of the Code … Continue reading

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NV: That third-party consenter consented is not inadmissible hearsay

Trial court’s ruling that the third party consenter’s consent was hearsay was plain error. It’s not offered for the truth of the matter asserted. Moultrie v. State, 131 Nev. Adv. Op. 97, 2015 Nev. App. LEXIS 15 (Dec. 24, 2015). … Continue reading

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D.Conn.: While def should have presented affidavit of standing, the SW inventory supports his standing

In a corporate office search, defendant should have presented an affidavit to show his standing in the office space. Despite that, however, the government’s search inventory strongly supports his standing because it shows documents taken from what was described as … Continue reading

Posted in Burden of proof, Computer and cloud searches, Franks doctrine, Overbreadth, Rule 41(g) / Return of property, Standing | Comments Off on D.Conn.: While def should have presented affidavit of standing, the SW inventory supports his standing

OR: Hyperventilating def was exigency for dispensing with blood draw warrant as time wore on

Because the warrant process [despite Oregon’s use of telephonic warrants] would take 2½ hours, there was exigency for defendant’s blood draw in the hospital. Moreover, defendant was hyperventilating when he was stopped, and they didn’t know whether he was faking … Continue reading

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N.D.Cal.: 55 day delay in getting cell phone SW didn’t matter because this was a supervised release revo proceeding, and the exclusionary rule wouldn’t apply

Defendant’s cell phone was seized in an arrest for loitering for pimping. After his probation officer went back and forth with the police, he declined to search it under defendant’s search condition, and 55 days elapsed, and a search warrant … Continue reading

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D.Neb.: Private search of envelope wasn’t expanded by the police

Defendant was subjected to a private search by his girlfriend, “Ms. X,” and records in envelopes were turned over to police. The looking in open envelopes is not analogous to the government’s looking at the film in their canisters like … Continue reading

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