Daily Archives: December 26, 2016

IL: Exclusionary rule does not apply to liquor license disciplinary proceeding arising from admin search

Petitioner had a liquor license in Chicago, and an inspection occurred under authority of state law and city ordinance. The permitted premises was the first floor, but he owned accessible property in the floors above. Upstairs, the officers found a … Continue reading

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W.D.N.Y.: Product of wiretap alone can produce PC for search of home, but here there was more

After a wiretap, police got search warrant for eight locations. Only defendant’s is at issue here, and he sought de novo review of the probable cause determination which he does not get. The affidavit for the search warrant showed probable … Continue reading

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D.Haw.: Alleged illegal search by “marshals of the Kingdom of Atooi” was private search

A crate of marijuana was searched by “marshals of the Kingdom of Atooi,” a Polynesian kingdom within Hawai’i not otherwise described. Their search was not at insistence or with the acquiescence of the state or federal government, and it could … Continue reading

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W.D.N.Y.: Def’s refusal to show his hands wasn’t a seizure when he didn’t comply with it

Direction to defendant to show hands was not responded to, so there was no submission to authority and thus no seizure. United States v. Jones, 2016 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 171988 (W.D.N.Y. Dec. 13, 2016), rejecting, 2016 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 108477 … Continue reading

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SC: Entry into backyard for knock-and-talk was really a search violating curtilage

Officers entered defendant’s backyard, the curtilage, to conduct what they called a “knock-and-talk,” but it was really a search by their own admission, and they violated the Fourth Amendment. The trial court was correct in finding the backyard curtilage and … Continue reading

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E.D.Pa.: No attenuation to save statement made after arrest w/o PC

No attenuation: defendant was arrested without probable cause and gave a statement, and there is no intervening event. Statement suppressed. United States v. Vilella, 2016 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 168741 (E.D.Pa. Dec. 6, 2016):

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E.D.Pa.: Court just doesn’t buy officer’s story about seeing gun; suppressed

The court just doesn’t believe the officer’s testimony that he saw a gun to justify an engine compartment search under the automobile exception. The government’s fallback position that it was valid as a Terry frisk is also rejected for lack … Continue reading

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