Daily Archives: July 24, 2018

Newsweek: Police Are Three Times More Likely to Kill Black Men, Study Finds: ‘Not a Problem Confined to a Single Region’

Newsweek: Police Are Three Times More Likely to Kill Black Men, Study Finds: ‘Not a Problem Confined to a Single Region’ by Scottie Andrew: Police violence and homicide have persistently and disproportionately affected black communities for decades. A new study … Continue reading

Posted in Excessive force, Racial profiling | Comments Off on Newsweek: Police Are Three Times More Likely to Kill Black Men, Study Finds: ‘Not a Problem Confined to a Single Region’

Legal Intelligencer: As Genealogy Databases Aid in Crime-Solving, Are Courts Ready to Tackle DNA Privacy?

Legal Intelligencer: As Genealogy Databases Aid in Crime-Solving, Are Courts Ready to Tackle DNA Privacy? by Max Mitchell: The trail of murders and assaults spanning California went unsolved for decades, until investigators turned to a tool more popular with genealogy … Continue reading

Posted in DNA, Third Party Doctrine | Comments Off on Legal Intelligencer: As Genealogy Databases Aid in Crime-Solving, Are Courts Ready to Tackle DNA Privacy?

OH5: Search was by consent: officer “[c]ontinually refreshed the voluntariness of the encounter”

The search of the hotel room was by consent. “Based on the foregoing, we find that the trial court did not err in finding that the consent to search was ‘voluntary, uncoerced and valid’ and that the detectives ‘[c]ontinually refreshed … Continue reading

Posted in Consent, Probable cause | Comments Off on OH5: Search was by consent: officer “[c]ontinually refreshed the voluntariness of the encounter”

D.Nev.: When the govt says it won’t use the product of the search at trial, the motion to suppress is moot, yet def still argues it

The government responded to the initial motion to suppress by saying it wouldn’t use the evidence obtained in the search. The court held the motion was then moot. Defendant pro se then claimed that meant that the officer must have … Continue reading

Posted in Ineffective assistance | Comments Off on D.Nev.: When the govt says it won’t use the product of the search at trial, the motion to suppress is moot, yet def still argues it

M.D.Fla.: Disney World’s own fraud investigators conducted private search of hotel room

Walt Disney World’s fraud investigators received a call from American Express that a card was being used fraudulently there. Ultimately, WDW own investigators entered defendant’s room without telling the police what they were doing and found access devices in plain … Continue reading

Posted in Franks doctrine, Private search | Comments Off on M.D.Fla.: Disney World’s own fraud investigators conducted private search of hotel room