Daily Archives: January 25, 2016

techdirt: Prosecutors Say Cops Don’t Need Warrants For Stingrays Because ‘Everyone Knows’ Cell Phones Generate Location Data

techdirt: Prosecutors Say Cops Don’t Need Warrants For Stingrays Because ‘Everyone Knows’ Cell Phones Generate Location Data by Tim Cushing: Up in Baltimore, where law enforcement Stingray device use hit critical mass faster and more furiously than anywhere else in … Continue reading

Posted in Cell site location information | Comments Off on techdirt: Prosecutors Say Cops Don’t Need Warrants For Stingrays Because ‘Everyone Knows’ Cell Phones Generate Location Data

HuffPo: How the Supreme Court Authorized Racial Profiling

HuffPo: How the Supreme Court Authorized Racial Profiling by Gunar Olsen: After the civil rights movement of the 1950s and 60s dismantled explicitly racist laws, racism became colorblind to survive. Today, although no law explicitly allows for racial profiling by … Continue reading

Posted in Pretext | Comments Off on HuffPo: How the Supreme Court Authorized Racial Profiling

AP: Chicago Hires Civil Rights Adviser for Police Department

AP: Chicago Hires Civil Rights Adviser for Police Department via NYT: CHICAGO — A former deputy superintendent of the Chicago Police Department who left to lead two major police departments is returning as a senior adviser to help guide the … Continue reading

Posted in Police misconduct | Comments Off on AP: Chicago Hires Civil Rights Adviser for Police Department

techdirt: DOJ’s New Restrictions On Surveilling Journalists Contain Exception For National Security Letters

techdirt: DOJ’s New Restrictions On Surveilling Journalists Contain Exception For National Security Letters by Tim Cushing: In 2013, it was revealed the DOJ had added First Amendment-trampling to its always-cavalier treatment of the Fourth Amendment by gathering journalists’ phone records. … Continue reading

Posted in Subpoenas / Nat'l Security Letters | Comments Off on techdirt: DOJ’s New Restrictions On Surveilling Journalists Contain Exception For National Security Letters

CA5 & AR: 34+ minute waits for drug dog without reasonable suspicion on totality

Defendant’s 40 minute detention waiting for a drug dog was without reasonable suspicion. None of the individual factors of reasonable suspicion relied upon by the government was reasonable suspicion in itself and even not on the totality. Oklahoma plates in … Continue reading

Posted in Reasonable suspicion | Comments Off on CA5 & AR: 34+ minute waits for drug dog without reasonable suspicion on totality

CA3: “Computer hardware” and “any equipment” in a child porn SW includes cell phones

“The warrant, as written, defines ‘computer hardware’ broadly. Horton does not and cannot argue that his cell phone is not ‘computer hardware’ as it is defined in the warrant, which includes ‘any equipment’ (emphasis added) capable of transmitting computer data. … Continue reading

Posted in Particularity, Scope of search | Comments Off on CA3: “Computer hardware” and “any equipment” in a child porn SW includes cell phones

NY Bronx: State’s request for def’s DNA came too late under discovery statute

The state’s argument that defendant doesn’t have a Fifth Amendment privilege in his DNA is a straw man not even argued by the defense. He does have a Fourth Amendment right, and the state’s request for DNA here was far … Continue reading

Posted in DNA, Probable cause | Comments Off on NY Bronx: State’s request for def’s DNA came too late under discovery statute

D.Vt.: Smell of burnt marijuana reasonable suspicion to continue stop

“Based on the totality of the circumstances, Trooper Steeves had a reasonable, articulable suspicion that someone in the vehicle had recently smoked marijuana and that Defendant, as the vehicle’s sole occupant, was the likely source of both the odor and … Continue reading

Posted in Reasonable suspicion | Comments Off on D.Vt.: Smell of burnt marijuana reasonable suspicion to continue stop

TX2: Warrantless blood draw under TX statute still unconstitutional where no warrant exception applies

The nonconsensual and warrantless search and seizure of defendant’s blood, which the officer conducted under Tex. Transp. Code § 724.012 and without facts supporting an independent exception to the warrant requirement, violated the Fourth Amendment. State v. Swan, 2016 Tex. … Continue reading

Posted in Drug or alcohol testing, Warrant requirement | Comments Off on TX2: Warrantless blood draw under TX statute still unconstitutional where no warrant exception applies

FL4: Handcuffing here was unjustified even by officer safety; no RS

There was an abandoned vehicle, and defendant was in the vicinity, standing in the road talking to a local resident, out of breath and sweating. The resident didn’t know him. Things didn’t add up to the officer, so he called … Continue reading

Posted in Reasonable suspicion | Comments Off on FL4: Handcuffing here was unjustified even by officer safety; no RS