Daily Archives: February 23, 2023

W.D.N.Y.: Using flashlight to look in bag tossed in flight in a house was reasonable on protective sweep

Use of a flashlight in a protective sweep of a black bag tossed by a fleeing suspect in the house was reasonable for safety reasons. Inside, methamphetamine was found. United States v. Adams, 2023 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 28537 (W.D.N.Y. Feb. … Continue reading

Posted in Dog sniff, Protective sweep, Reasonable suspicion | Comments Off on W.D.N.Y.: Using flashlight to look in bag tossed in flight in a house was reasonable on protective sweep

CA10: “perfunctory factual references” with three legal theories not enough to get a suppression hearing

“Rather than outline factual disputes, Windom’s motion to suppress offered three legal arguments—staleness, nexus, and lack of good faith—for why the affidavit was insufficient to support a search warrant. These arguments contained only perfunctory factual references, with none rising to … Continue reading

Posted in Inevitable discovery, Suppression hearings | Comments Off on CA10: “perfunctory factual references” with three legal theories not enough to get a suppression hearing

NYT: Can My Neighbor Point a Video Doorbell at My Apartment Door?

NYT: Can My Neighbor Point a Video Doorbell at My Apartment Door? by Ronda Kayse (“Ubiquitous in many suburban neighborhoods, the devices have been slow to catch on in city apartments, but that is changing as New Yorkers warm to … Continue reading

Posted in Video surveillance | Comments Off on NYT: Can My Neighbor Point a Video Doorbell at My Apartment Door?