Daily Archives: September 9, 2020

Techdirt: Government’s ‘Reverse’ Warrant Rejected By Two Consecutive Federal Judges

Techdirt: Government’s ‘Reverse’ Warrant Rejected By Two Consecutive Federal Judges by Tim Cushing (“Warrants are supposed to have a certain amount of particularity. These warrants have none. All they have are some coordinates and a clock. Fortunately, as the EFF … Continue reading

Posted in GPS / Tracking Data | Comments Off on Techdirt: Government’s ‘Reverse’ Warrant Rejected By Two Consecutive Federal Judges

CA7: Civil claim for false arrest or detention on fabricated evidence is 4A claim

“A claim for false arrest or pretrial detention based on fabricated evidence sounds in the Fourth Amendment right to be free from seizure without probable cause.” Patrick v. City of Chicago, 2020 U.S. App. LEXIS 28380 (7th Cir. Sept. 8, … Continue reading

Posted in § 1983 / Bivens, Arrest or entry on arrest, Probable cause | Comments Off on CA7: Civil claim for false arrest or detention on fabricated evidence is 4A claim

CA3: Postal inspector had RS to detain package for dog sniff

“The [postal] inspector had reasonable suspicion. [¶] The inspector acted reasonably. Five signs aroused his suspicion: First, the package was from Puerto Rico, a common source of illegal cocaine shipments. Second, the package was sent by Priority Mail, a common … Continue reading

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CA9: Neighbor’s 911 call about burglary justified police entry protective sweep

A 911 burglary call by defendant’s neighbor led to police coming to the house, and the police entered to look for suspects. This was a reasonable entry based on exigency. United States v. Booth, 2020 U.S. App. LEXIS 28377 (9th … Continue reading

Posted in Emergency / exigency, Reasonable suspicion | Comments Off on CA9: Neighbor’s 911 call about burglary justified police entry protective sweep

Vice: Faulty Facial Recognition Led to His Arrest—Now He’s Suing

Vice: Faulty Facial Recognition Led to His Arrest—Now He’s Suing by Natalie O’Neill (“Michael Oliver is the second Black man found to be wrongfully arrested by Detroit police because of the technology—and his lawyers suspect there are many more.”)

Posted in Surveillance technology | Comments Off on Vice: Faulty Facial Recognition Led to His Arrest—Now He’s Suing