Daily Archives: November 29, 2019

CO holds four months of pole camera surveillance of def’s fenced-in backyard was unreasonable and violated 4A

Four months of warrantless and continuous pole camera surveillance of defendant’s fenced-in back yard was unreasonable and violated his reasonable expectation of privacy under the Fourth Amendment. People v. Tafoya, 2019 COA 176, 2019 Colo. App. LEXIS 1799 (Nov. 27, … Continue reading

Posted in Pole cameras | Comments Off on CO holds four months of pole camera surveillance of def’s fenced-in backyard was unreasonable and violated 4A

FL follows Mitchell on blood draws from the unconscious

The Florida Supreme Court granted a certified question of public importance on whether a search warrant was required to draw blood from an unconscious motorist in the hospital. In the meantime, SCOTUS decided Mitchell v. Wisconsin. This court applies Mitchell … Continue reading

Posted in Drug or alcohol testing, Probation / Parole search | Comments Off on FL follows Mitchell on blood draws from the unconscious

KS: Officer’s reinitating contact during stop and leaning into window with hands on door meant to driver he wasn’t free to leave

Officer’s reinitiating contact with driver, leaning on window and asking about asking more questions on the totality signaled to defendant he wasn’t free to leave. State v. Gonzalez, 2019 Kan. App. LEXIS 85 (Nov. 27, 2019):

Posted in Seizure | Comments Off on KS: Officer’s reinitating contact during stop and leaning into window with hands on door meant to driver he wasn’t free to leave

WaPo: Maryland police drones aid in searches, crash investigations, but raise privacy concerns

WaPo: Maryland police drones aid in searches, crash investigations, but raise privacy concerns by Alison Knezevich:

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IL: Once def was acquitted, seized computer data should have been returned, not searched again without a warrant

Defendant was a Peoria police officer being accused of sexual assault, and the Illinois State Police obtained a search warrant for his computer and other devices. The hard drives were copied with EnCase software. Defendant was tried on the sexual … Continue reading

Posted in Rule 41(g) / Return of property, Scope of search, Warrant execution | Comments Off on IL: Once def was acquitted, seized computer data should have been returned, not searched again without a warrant

E.D.N.C.: “[R]easonable suspicion need not rule out the possibility of innocent conduct.” Navarette

A brief meeting for what could only be described by the officer, in his experience, was likely a hand-to-hand sale in a high crime area reasonable suspicion for a stop. “Other suggested explanations by defendant, such as that defendant may … Continue reading

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Daily Beast: Trump Is First to Use PATRIOT Act to Detain a Man Forever

Daily Beast: Trump Is First to Use PATRIOT Act to Detain a Man Forever by Spencer Ackerman (“Never in 18 years has the government used Section 412 of the PATRIOT Act, which permits indefinite detention of resident aliens on national-security … Continue reading

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D.Guam: 4A standing is not jurisdictional, so the court can go to GFE without deciding PC

Standing to contest a search and seizure issue is not jurisdictional, so the court doesn’t have to decide standing. Going to the merits, there was probable cause for the search warrant for the package arriving by mail, and the delay … Continue reading

Posted in Consent, Good faith exception, Ineffective assistance | Comments Off on D.Guam: 4A standing is not jurisdictional, so the court can go to GFE without deciding PC

CA6: SW’s PC doesn’t even have to be decided if affidavit falls within “heartland” of GFE

The affidavit for this search warrant could have been more detailed, but it doesn’t necessarily show it to be weak. Nevertheless, the court doesn’t even have to decide probable cause because this case falls within the “heartland” of the good … Continue reading

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CA6: Alleged violation of discovery order by unauthorized possession of Jencks material justifies search of jail cell, not that there’s a REP in it anyway

Alleged violation of a protective order on discovery authorized a search of defendant’s jail cell and a search warrant for his mother’s home after he mailed it to her to copy and disseminate. The protective order itself justified the search … Continue reading

Posted in Prison and jail searches | Comments Off on CA6: Alleged violation of discovery order by unauthorized possession of Jencks material justifies search of jail cell, not that there’s a REP in it anyway