Daily Archives: June 9, 2021

Law.com: Hey SIRI, Does the Fifth Amendment Protect My Passcode?

Law.com: Hey SIRI, Does the Fifth Amendment Protect My Passcode? by Robert J. Anello & Richard F. Albert (“When law enforcement seeks to compel a subject to provide a passcode to allow them to rummage through a cellphone, courts have … Continue reading

Posted in Cell phones, Privileges | Comments Off on Law.com: Hey SIRI, Does the Fifth Amendment Protect My Passcode?

Forbes: Cop Who Led Accidental No-Knock Raid Against 78-Year-Old Grandfather Can’t Be Sued, Court Rules

Forbes: Cop Who Led Accidental No-Knock Raid Against 78-Year-Old Grandfather Can’t Be Sued, Court Rules by Nick Sibilla (“It was a police raid John Oliver called ‘almost cartoonishly idiotic.’ Looking to apprehend a violent drug dealer at his home in … Continue reading

Posted in Excessive force, Warrant execution | Comments Off on Forbes: Cop Who Led Accidental No-Knock Raid Against 78-Year-Old Grandfather Can’t Be Sued, Court Rules

VA: Owner’s suspended DL supported stop under Glover

Officers had reasonable suspicion under Glover to believe the driver of a vehicle was the owner who had a suspended DL. Mitchell v. Commonwealth, 2021 Va. App. LEXIS 89 (June 8, 2021). “Calvert’s comments to police to shoot him and … Continue reading

Posted in Excessive force, Reasonable suspicion | Comments Off on VA: Owner’s suspended DL supported stop under Glover

CA2: No 4A extraterritorial jurisdiction over Switzerland enforcing its own law against Americans in Switzerland

An extraterritorial seizure of art work and antiquities in Switzerland of American citizens doesn’t involve the Fourth Amendment. International law has not adopted the Fourth Amendment’s probable cause standard. There is no justification shown for applying the Fourth Amendment to … Continue reading

Posted in Foreign searches, Ineffective assistance, Nexus | Comments Off on CA2: No 4A extraterritorial jurisdiction over Switzerland enforcing its own law against Americans in Switzerland

N.D.Ill.: Arrest in common area of apt building not on curtilage

Defendant’s arrest in a common area of an apartment building was not on the curtilage. United States v. Anderson, 2021 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 106278 (N.D. Ill. June 7, 2021). Defendant’s Franks challenge fails as to what was omitted from the … Continue reading

Posted in Arrest or entry on arrest, Curtilage, Franks doctrine, Reasonable suspicion | Comments Off on N.D.Ill.: Arrest in common area of apt building not on curtilage