Daily Archives: July 31, 2016

CA11: Breath test to enter HS prom was reasonable as school search, but unnecessary detention of those who passed was not

Plaintiffs rode a party bus to their high school prom. The prom had a strict no alcohol, drug, or tobacco policy. A champagne bottle was found on the bus, and that led the school district to detain everybody on the … Continue reading

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Orin Kerr: Garland could be confirmed by lame duck Senate without a hearing

Consider Orin Kerr’s observation that the Senate could confirm Merrick Garland in a lame duck session without any hearings.

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OR: Def’s prior similar crimes are valid consideration of PC on totality

A search warrant was issued for defendant for possession of a stolen motor vehicle. It was a valid consideration in the showing of probable cause that defendant had four priors for the same crime. State v. Newsted, 279 Ore. App. … Continue reading

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OR: Search of computer’s browser history limited to the PC; here, 15 minutes, not two months; a computer is more of a “place to be searched” rather than a “thing to be seized”

Defendant was convicted of murder by child abuse. The only relation of a computer was his admission that he used a computer to search for symptoms when the child was sick 15 minutes before his 911 call. When the computer … Continue reading

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FL3: Consent to search bedroom was solely for cell phone; search of dresser after phone was found suppressed

Defendant signed a general consent for his bedroom, but the police told him they were only looking for a stolen cell phone. After they found the cell phone, they started searching his dresser drawers and found cocaine. The search exceeded … Continue reading

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WA: While cell phones are certainly “private affairs,” there’s no special abandonment rule for cell phones

Cell phones are the “private affairs” of Washingtonians under their state constitution, merely stating the obvious, but they can be abandoned like anything else, and the court declines to adopt a cell phone exception to abandonment. State v. Samalia, 2016 … Continue reading

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MA: Seizing a bag during arrest at a hotel out of mere curiosity unreasonable

Defendant was arrested at a hotel, and his stuff was arranged to be left with the hotel until he could get it, except for a bag that the police were curious about. “As part of the booking process, LaPlante opened … Continue reading

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