Daily Archives: December 22, 2019

CA1: Routine booking fingerprints even in an unlawful arrest not subject to exclusionary rule and are reasonable

Routine taking of booking fingerprints held not unreasonable, even if the arrest turned out to be unlawful. The district court held that they were admissible by inevitable discovery because the officers would have found that defendant was here unlawfully. The … Continue reading

Posted in Arrest or entry on arrest, Exclusionary rule | Comments Off on CA1: Routine booking fingerprints even in an unlawful arrest not subject to exclusionary rule and are reasonable

IA: Arrest of the “wrong guy” under a warrant unreasonable where no effort made to determine if he was the right guy or not

Arrest of the “wrong guy” under a warrant here was unreasonable. Defendant claimed he was the wrong Troy Ford, and the officer searched him finding drugs before even attempting to verify whether he was the right one. It didn’t take … Continue reading

Posted in Arrest or entry on arrest, Reasonableness | Comments Off on IA: Arrest of the “wrong guy” under a warrant unreasonable where no effort made to determine if he was the right guy or not

IA: Std of review of PC is not is there PC, but is there a substantial basis for believing there was PC

“Because the Fourth Amendment values the practice of obtaining a warrant to reduce the perception of intrusive police conduct, we do not strictly scrutinize the sufficiency of the underlying affidavit. … Instead, we decide whether the issuing magistrate had a … Continue reading

Posted in Apparent authority, Reasonable suspicion, Standards of review | Comments Off on IA: Std of review of PC is not is there PC, but is there a substantial basis for believing there was PC

N.D.Ohio: 2255 including a 4A IAC claim denied for lack of any statement of facts of what’s at issue

Defendant filed a “laundry list” 2255. His Franks IAC claim is rejected for lack of any offer of proof that it would remotely be granted. Johnson v. United States, 2019 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 216544 (N.D. Ohio Dec. 17, 2019).* The … Continue reading

Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off on N.D.Ohio: 2255 including a 4A IAC claim denied for lack of any statement of facts of what’s at issue

CNN: Attorney General Barr defends surveillance tool as Republican scrutiny grows

CNN: Attorney General Barr defends surveillance tool as Republican scrutiny grows by David Shortell (“Attorney General William Barr called the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act a ‘critical tool’ and vowed to preserve it Wednesday after suggestions from Republican lawmakers that the … Continue reading

Posted in FISA | Comments Off on CNN: Attorney General Barr defends surveillance tool as Republican scrutiny grows

AP: Officers shoot woman during search for man already in jail

AP: Officers shoot woman during search for man already in jail (“Officers who mistakenly entered a home trying to arrest an Alabama man who was already in jail shot a woman who was inside, news outlets reported.”)

Posted in Police misconduct | Comments Off on AP: Officers shoot woman during search for man already in jail

WaPo: Editorial: Why Congress needs to regulate facial-recognition systems

WaPo: Editorial: Why Congress needs to regulate facial-recognition systems (“A MASSIVE government study in which more than 18 million images of more than 8 million people were run through almost 200 algorithms has confirmed what researchers have been warning for years: Facial-recognition … Continue reading

Posted in Surveillance technology | Comments Off on WaPo: Editorial: Why Congress needs to regulate facial-recognition systems

NYTimes: Opinion: You Should Be Freaking Out About Privacy

NYTimes: Opinion: You Should Be Freaking Out About Privacy featuring Farhad Manjoo and Kara Swisher (“Nothing to hide, nothing to fear? Think again.”)

Posted in Surveillance technology | Comments Off on NYTimes: Opinion: You Should Be Freaking Out About Privacy

NYTimes Editorial: Total Surveillance Is Not What America Signed Up For

NYTimes Editorial: Total Surveillance Is Not What America Signed Up For:

Posted in Surveillance technology | Comments Off on NYTimes Editorial: Total Surveillance Is Not What America Signed Up For