Daily Archives: May 21, 2016

D.Haw.: False alert package was opened didn’t nullify reasonable belief of exigent circumstances

The package had a GPS and a trigger “alarm” or alert for when it was opened. Here, however, the trigger alert was subject to failure if the package was dropped with sufficient force. Officers assembled outside the apartment, and the … Continue reading

Posted in Anticipatory warrant, Emergency / exigency, Reasonableness | Comments Off on D.Haw.: False alert package was opened didn’t nullify reasonable belief of exigent circumstances

E.D.Wis.: SW particularity shown in attachments; lack of a computer search protocol not a violation of Fourth Amendment

The attachments to the application and search warrant, reasonably read, limited the search and provided necessary particularity. [Comprehensive discussion of principles of interpretation of documents.] The lack of a computer search protocol didn’t violate the Fourth Amendment. United States v. … Continue reading

Posted in Computer and cloud searches | Comments Off on E.D.Wis.: SW particularity shown in attachments; lack of a computer search protocol not a violation of Fourth Amendment

N.D.Ala.: Flyover revealed MJ plants in backyard; warrantless entry violated curtilage; no exigency shown

Police in a helicopter saw a marijuana grow in defendant’s backyard. The backyard was not visible from the road. Therefore, the backyard was clearly curtilage, and the police warrantless entry into the back yard violated the Fourth Amendment. There was … Continue reading

Posted in Curtilage | Comments Off on N.D.Ala.: Flyover revealed MJ plants in backyard; warrantless entry violated curtilage; no exigency shown

D.S.D.: A pre-Rodriguez delay didn’t warrant suppression despite the lack of reasonable suspicion

Defendant was stopped in an Eighth Circuit state governed by the former de minimus rule three months prior to Rodriguez, and it’s already been held that the old rule applies until that date. The district court finds the officer’s assertions … Continue reading

Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off on D.S.D.: A pre-Rodriguez delay didn’t warrant suppression despite the lack of reasonable suspicion

CA7: Excessive lighting at a traffic stop (which this really wasn’t) isn’t excessive force in a high crime area at night

Defendant’s car was parked within 15′ of a crosswalk, a violation of state law unless passengers were getting out. The officers saw no driver and nobody getting out, so they pulled up on the car and shined a light and … Continue reading

Posted in Excessive force, Plain view, feel, smell | Comments Off on CA7: Excessive lighting at a traffic stop (which this really wasn’t) isn’t excessive force in a high crime area at night

CA3: Def’s complaint about how CP forensic search was done didn’t rise to “objective unreasonableness”

In a computer search for child pornography, the use of the “hashing” function rather than “gallery view function” is not constitutionally required. That was an issue in United States v. Burgess, 576 F.3d 1078 (10th Cir. 2009), which the court … Continue reading

Posted in Reasonableness | Comments Off on CA3: Def’s complaint about how CP forensic search was done didn’t rise to “objective unreasonableness”

W.D.N.Y.: Consenter said she had no common authority over a barn but officers assumed it and broke in; suppressed

Defendant’s wife told the officers that she could not consent to entry into the barn on their farm because she told them she didn’t have authority and she wasn’t on the deed. The officers caucused, acknowledged the consent problem amongst … Continue reading

Posted in Apparent authority | Comments Off on W.D.N.Y.: Consenter said she had no common authority over a barn but officers assumed it and broke in; suppressed

CA6: SW for cell phone based on PC defeats § 1983 case over phone search

“Professional hunter William ‘Spook’ Spann sued his former employee and several officers from the Tennessee Wildlife Resources Agency under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for alleged violations of his constitutional rights during an investigation into his hunting practices. The district court … Continue reading

Posted in § 1983 / Bivens, Cell phones | Comments Off on CA6: SW for cell phone based on PC defeats § 1983 case over phone search