Monthly Archives: June 2021

HPM: Former Houston Police Officer Pleads Guilty To Falsifying Records In Harding Street Raid Case

Houston Public Media: Former Houston Police Officer Pleads Guilty To Falsifying Records In Harding Street Raid Case by Lucio Vasquez (“Steven Bryant is the first officer to be convicted in the wake of the raid.”)

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CA4: Trash out for collection at the curb is not on the curtilage

Trash out for collection at the curb is not on the curtilage. United States v. Holmes, 2021 U.S. App. LEXIS 16418 (4th Cir. June 2, 2021). The affidavit for a tracking warrant was misleading in one respect, but it wasn’t … Continue reading

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WaPo: If facial recognition is not regulated now, it will never be used responsibly

WaPo: If facial recognition is not regulated now, it will never be used responsibly (“Facial recognition software is full of peril, but it’s also full of potential. with the powerful technology still in its infancy and regulation next to nonexistent, … Continue reading

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SCOTUS: Tribal officers can stop and detain non-Indians on tribal lands

Tribal police have the inherent authority to stop and search non-Indians on tribal lands for potential violations of tribal, state, or federal law. United States v. Cooley, 2021 U.S. LEXIS 2816 (June 1, 2021). The syllabus:

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E.D.Mo.: Sexual assault allegation by school official states 4A claim

Allegation of a sexual assault by a school official states a Fourth Amendment claim. Hermann v. Kirkwood R-7 Sch. Dist., 2021 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 102574 (E.D. Mo. June 1, 2021). Officers with a search warrant for electronic devices could look … Continue reading

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DE: Agency investigative SDT akin to GJ’s

An agency investigative subpoena duces tecum is akin to a grand jury’s, following Morton Salt and Powell. State Dept. of Finance v. AT&T Inc., 2021 Del. LEXIS 178 (June 1, 2021):

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CA9: Suspicionless search of unconscious person in hospital bed violated clearly established law

“Thus, under binding precedent from this court and the Supreme Court, any reasonable officer would have known that Defendants’ suspicionless and warrantless search of Katzenjammer’s body, while she lay unconscious in a hospital bed, violated the Fourth Amendment.” Young v. … Continue reading

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CA8: Visitor’s property could be searched under warrant for host’s place on RS they were involved in drugs, too

Defendant was a visitor at a friend’s house when the house was searched under a warrant for drugs. She was on the couch with a meth pipe next to her, so it was reasonable to search her lockbox under the … Continue reading

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MA: No REP in a sent text message

There is no reasonable expectation of privacy in a text message sent to another cell phone. Commonwealth v. Delgado-Rivera, 2021 Mass. LEXIS 341 (June 1, 2021):

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D.Md.: State’s DoIT owns and controls state computers and can enter computers and offices for access; no REP in state computer

The State of Maryland’s Department of Information Technology owns and controls the computers on its network and has the authority to enter offices to enter computers. Here, child pornography was found. Defendant had no reasonable expectation of privacy in the … Continue reading

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CA6: Detention with handcuffing on RS permitted putting def in police car

There was reasonable suspicion for defendant’s detention, including putting him in a police car while they sorted it out. That was not yet an arrest. United States v. Rogers, 2021 U.S. App. LEXIS 16160 (6th Cir. May 27, 2021). The … Continue reading

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E.D.Cal.: Internet research can provide PC for a SW

An officer’s internet search provided a substantial basis for finding probable cause to search defendant’s house for evidence of misrepresenting military service. Citations to the places where the information was be found elevated this above a mere anonymous tip. United … Continue reading

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N.D.Ill.: Pointing a gun isn’t a seizure, but def’s raising hands made it one

Defendant wasn’t seized just by the officer pointing a gun at him; it was when he raised his hands and submitted. “Here, because the officers were responding to a call about an individual with a firearm and Officer Davis reasonably … Continue reading

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S.D.N.Y.: No precharge right of access to SW materials while investigation ongoing

The target of a search (here Rudy Giuliani) doesn’t have a precharge right of access to the materials where the investigation is ongoing. In re Search Warrants Executed on April 28, 2021, 2021 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 101348 (S.D. N.Y. May … Continue reading

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PA: DUI with agg. assault was sufficiently exigent to dispense with SW for BAC

Defendant was accused of DUI and aggravated assault, and the officer decided that the additional complexity of investigating the assault charge made a warrantless blood draw exigent. It didn’t matter that the state charged him with the assault two months … Continue reading

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CA9: Franks violation states § 1983 claim

The DA declined to prosecutor the plaintiff because of a Franks violation in the affidavit for the search warrant. Plaintiff sued, and qualified immunity is found not inapplicable. Dahlin v. Frieborn, 2021 U.S. App. LEXIS 16077 (9th Cir. May 28, … Continue reading

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