Monthly Archives: November 2023

CA8: Officer corroborated only CI’s objective information, not the crux, but that was enough for PC for automobile exception

There was no corroboration of the incriminating part of the CI’s tale that defendant, a convicted felon, kept a gun hidden under the hood of his car. “But Officer Princivalli had no reason to find Moore’s statements untrustworthy or unreliable. … Continue reading

Posted in Automobile exception, Excessive force, Informant hearsay, Seizure | Comments Off on CA8: Officer corroborated only CI’s objective information, not the crux, but that was enough for PC for automobile exception

NYLJ: Section 1983 Fabricated Evidence Claims—Focus on ‘Barnes v. City of New York’

NYLJ: Section 1983 Fabricated Evidence Claims—Focus on ‘Barnes v. City of New York’ (“Police fabrication of evidence gives rise to a steady stream of § 1983 fabrication of evidence claims, which frequently raise important, difficult legal issues. The recent decision … Continue reading

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CA7: Misuse of dealer tag justified search incident

The district court decided this vehicle search on inventory. On appeal, the court goes with search incident because the vehicle was being driven with improper dealer tags. Officer “Hobbs’s search of the glovebox incident to Travis’s arrest was proper. Evidence … Continue reading

Posted in Probation / Parole search, Search incident, Waiver | Comments Off on CA7: Misuse of dealer tag justified search incident

N.D.Ga.: SW for defendant’s email to show his and others’ state of mind at time of crime was not overbroad

The search warrant for defendant’s email accounts to show where he was when he accessed it, “evidence relating to the planning, execution, furtherance and/or concealment of the crimes under investigation,” and his “and other participants’ state of mind as it … Continue reading

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M.D.Pa.: Police continually banging on def’s door to come out was seizure; no exigency applies; suppressed

Defendant fled from the police in his car in a highspeed chase. They went to his house and came on to defendant’s curtilage, his porch, and shined flashlights through the windows. This was a search on a constitutionally protected area. … Continue reading

Posted in Curtilage, Emergency / exigency, Particularity, Prison and jail searches, Reasonable suspicion | Comments Off on M.D.Pa.: Police continually banging on def’s door to come out was seizure; no exigency applies; suppressed

D.Nev.: Def can’t be conclusory attempting to show standing in a rented vehicle

Conclusory statement of standing in a rented vehicle fails without some proof. “Defendant’s expectation of privacy rests on his contention that he rented the Taurus on Turo and lacked knowledge of the possibly stolen character of the vehicle. But if … Continue reading

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E.D.N.Y.: Police officer’s drug test while on sick leave for work injury was justified by RS

Plaintiff is a Suffolk County police officer on work-related sick leave. He was ordered to take a drug test while off, and the court finds it a search and done on reasonable suspicion. Volpe v. Ryder, 2023 U.S. Dist. LEXIS … Continue reading

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PA: Fleeing a traffic stop and wrecking car and then running off was abandonment of the car

Defendant fled in his car from a traffic stop and wrecked a few blocks away. He abandoned the car at the scene by running off. Commonwealth v. Hall, 2023 PA Super 224, 2023 Pa. Super. LEXIS 513 (Nov. 3, 2023). … Continue reading

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CA11: Gov’t adequately protected against A-C materials being searched in border search of Venezuelan attorney’s cell phone; “no privileged material was ever found”

Defendant was a Venezuelan attorney whose cell phone was searched at the border. He said there likely was privileged attorney-client information on his phone, but it was searched under a DHS protocols to safeguard privileged information and legal advice was … Continue reading

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NH: False information to officer during stop is independent crime even if stop illegal

Whether defendant’s stop was valid or not, her giving a false name and DOB was an independent crime that would not be suppressed. State v. Hellinger, 2023 N.H. LEXIS 188 (Nov. 2, 2023). Defendant’s posture driving an open air Jeep … Continue reading

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WI: Failure to respond to City’s letter to inspect rat-infested property was implied consent

The city wrote by certified mail to the owner of rat-infested property apparently abandoned since he hadn’t come from home in California since before Covid. State law allows inspections if requested and permitted. The owner never responded. His Fourth Amendment … Continue reading

Posted in Administrative search, Consent, Dog sniff | Comments Off on WI: Failure to respond to City’s letter to inspect rat-infested property was implied consent

S.D.N.Y.: SW affidavit not yet available to def merely for bail application

Defendant doesn’t get to see the affidavit for warrant yet just for his bail application because the government asserts the investigation is still ongoing. Discovery of child pornography was inadvertent, and the bail application isn’t a discovery device. The question … Continue reading

Posted in Probation / Parole search, Warrant papers | Comments Off on S.D.N.Y.: SW affidavit not yet available to def merely for bail application

techdirt: Court Rejects Extremely Broad Google Search Warrant, Citing Both Carpenter And Riley

techdirt: Court Rejects Extremely Broad Google Search Warrant, Citing Both Carpenter And Riley by Tim Cushing. The case is State v. Grace from Ohio, posted here.

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GA: SW for things that were not controlled substances entitles target to return of the property

The search warrant here was for delta-8,9,10-THC but 8 and 10 are not controlled substances. Lacking probable cause for them, the search target is entitled to return of its property. Elements Distribution v. State, 2023 Ga. App. LEXIS 535 (Nov. … Continue reading

Posted in Consent, Rule 41(g) / Return of property, Standing, Voluntariness | Comments Off on GA: SW for things that were not controlled substances entitles target to return of the property

D.Alaska: Admin. inspections of intrastate goldmines are legal under Mine Safety and Health Act

The Mine Safety and Health Administration sought an inspection of the respondent goldmine based on safety complaints it had received. The Fourth Amendment does not require an administrative warrant for an inspection. “Regulatory inspections pursuant to the Mine Act are … Continue reading

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M.D.Fla.: “[T]here is no constitutional right to be free from arrest on the basis of illegally obtained evidence.”

“[T]here is no constitutional right to be free from arrest on the basis of illegally obtained evidence.” Santiago v. Swain, 2023 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 194607 (M.D. Fla. Oct. 31, 2023).* Plaintiff’s civil Franks claim fails because there was probable cause … Continue reading

Posted in Arrest or entry on arrest, Collective knowledge, Franks doctrine, Waiver | Comments Off on M.D.Fla.: “[T]here is no constitutional right to be free from arrest on the basis of illegally obtained evidence.”

NE: Reliability of Google Translate app for use to get consent to search not preserved below

Consent to search granted by a non-English speaking suspect via Google Translate app was not properly preserved for appeal as to the accuracy of the translation. “While Hernandez’ counsel objected to the admission of the evidence obtained from the search … Continue reading

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NM: Too vague a description wasn’t RS for this stop, one mile from crime scene, 37-40 minutes later, vague description of car

“We view the totality of the circumstances at the time Deputy Ruiz seized Defendant through the lens of the district court’s factual finding that the suspect did not hide, as our standard of review requires. Based on the passage of … Continue reading

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D.Minn.: There is no duty under Brady for officers executing a SW to seize exculpatory evidence, too

The government executed a search warrant for emails on defendant’s computer. The searching officers have no duty to seize exculpatory information when they execute the warrant. “All Brady requires is that if the prosecution seized those emails, it turn over … Continue reading

Posted in Reasonable suspicion, Warrant execution | Comments Off on D.Minn.: There is no duty under Brady for officers executing a SW to seize exculpatory evidence, too

WaPo: This FISA provision goes beyond terrorism. It’s vital to beating the opioid crisis.

WaPo: This FISA provision goes beyond terrorism. It’s vital to beating the opioid crisis. by Rahul Gupta (“The U.S. government’s bedrock authority for staying ahead of international threats is about to expire. As the White House director of national drug … Continue reading

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