Daily Archives: May 8, 2022

WaPo: 5 takeaways from The Post’s investigation into no-knock warrants

WaPo: 5 takeaways from The Post’s investigation into no-knock warrants by Courtney Kan, Jenn Abelson, and Nicole Dungca (“After police killed Breonna Taylor in her home in 2020 during a botched raid, The Washington Post spent more than a year … Continue reading

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WaPo: Editorial: Lack of a federal privacy law opens the door to dystopia

WaPo: Editorial: Lack of a federal privacy law opens the door to dystopia (“Imagine every one of us could be located using only a photograph, or identified based on the way we walk — that our fingerprints could be scanned … Continue reading

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OH6: Police coming uninvited in hotel room 18 minutes after checkout time was unreasonable

Officers arrived at defendant’s motel room 18 minutes after checkout time and searched. The state claimed defendant lost his reasonable expectation of privacy in the room. Hotel management, however, had done nothing about that and apparently didn’t even know. The … Continue reading

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D.Kan.: 10 weeks of pole camera surveillance in disability fraud investigation was reasonable

Defendant was on disability. The government placed a pole camera across the street from his house to see whether he was able or not, and he was indicted for theft of public funds. Ten weeks of pole camera surveillance was … Continue reading

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D.Md.: Def gets a hearing on a Franks challenge to a red-flag SW that produced 42 firearms

Maryland provides for “Extreme Risk Protective Orders” (“ERPO”) to seize firearms from unstable persons. [These are know as red-flag laws in some other states.] “The ERPO law establishes a framework by which persons found to pose an immediate danger to … Continue reading

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IN: State const’l arguments have to be raised in trial court first

Defendant’s argument for a change in standing law under the state constitution that he should have the ability to challenge the search of another person’s person and clothing wasn’t raised below, so it’s waived. State v. Allen, 2022 Ind. App. … Continue reading

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AR: SW for evidence linking to a homicide in another county found clothes worn seen in video

In a homicide investigation, officers showed probable cause for defendant’s house for evidence of the murder where the victim was abducted, driven 75 miles, and her body dumped in another county. Defendant was on video surveillance where the abduction occurred, … Continue reading

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D.N.M.: Emergency justification for real time CSLI dissipated and leads to suppression

Capture of defendant’s real-time CSLI was a search under Carpenter, but the government showed that officers had an emergency justification for getting it at first, but that dissipated. Finally, the good faith exception does not apply here. United States v. … Continue reading

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TN: Owner of premises could consent to enter room of visitor

Defendant was a suspect in a murder, and police were admitted to the house where he stayed by consent of the owner. He wouldn’t come out of his bedroom, so they went in. The owner had complete control over the … Continue reading

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