Daily Archives: March 13, 2016

CA10: “No trespassing” sign doesn’t deny implied license of a police officer to approach a house to ask questions

Even a “no trespassing” sign doesn’t deny implied license of a police officer to approach a house to ask questions of the occupant. United States v. Carloss, 2016 U.S. App. LEXIS 4547 (10th Cir. March 11, 2016):

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N.D.Ga.: Yahoo! provided info to NCMEC which supported RS for border search of def’s laptop

The government and NCMEC got a tip of defendant’s potential purchasing of child pornography through Xoom, a money transferring company, and Yahoo! working together. Defendant was flagged as a potential child pornography should he travel overseas. He arrived in Atlanta … Continue reading

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E.D.N.Y.: A brief explanation of how FISA surveillance works and why this was constitutional

Defendant pled to attempting to provide material support to a terrorist organization by flying from JFK to Turkey to Pakistan. His emails overseas were captured by FISA and led to his prosecution. After the plea he filed a 2255 to … Continue reading

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E.D.N.C.: Cut-and-paste mistaken sentence fragment into SW affidavit wasn’t enough for Franks challenge

A negligent cut-and-paste error of a sentence fragment from one form affidavit into another wasn’t sufficient to trigger a Franks hearing because it was essentially meaningless over all. United States v. Davis, 2016 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 29423 (E.D.N.C. Jan. 6, … Continue reading

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MA: If arrest invalid, inventory based on it is too

Defendant’s arrest was invalid, so the inventory of his car was invalid. Commonwealth v. Williams, 2016 Mass. Super. LEXIS 19 (Wooster Feb. 18, 2016). The protective sweep here was invalid, but that did not require suppression of the search. Excising … Continue reading

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San Francisco Chronicle: Police panel upholds complaint for arresting public defender

San Francisco Chronicle: Police panel upholds complaint for arresting public defender by Paul Elias (AP) A civilian police oversight board said San Francisco police officers had no valid reason to arrest a public defender inside the city’s courthouse after she … Continue reading

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The Guardian: FBI could force us to turn on iPhone cameras and microphones, says Apple

The Guardian: FBI could force us to turn on iPhone cameras and microphones, says Apple: Eddy Cue warns precedent set by San Bernardino case could lead to company being forced to turn users’ smartphones into surveillance devices.

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Reason.com: 4 Things to Know About Sri Srinivasan, Obama’s Potential Nominee to Replace Scalia on the Supreme Court

Reason.com: 4 Things to Know About Sri Srinivasan, Obama’s Potential Nominee to Replace Scalia on the Supreme Court by Damon Root:

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