Daily Archives: October 28, 2025

GA: SW to photograph a tattoo was reasonable

A search warrant to photograph a tattoo was reasonable. Here, a sex assault assailant was described as having a particular tattoo, and defendant was the suspect. They found a matching tattoo. Grier v. State, 2025 Ga. App. LEXIS 484 (Oct. … Continue reading

Posted in Reasonableness, Seizure, Warrant execution | Comments Off on GA: SW to photograph a tattoo was reasonable

D.N.M.: Running LPN after handcuffing failed inevitable discovery

On the totality, defendant’s stop was without reasonable suspicion. Only after he was handcuffed did an officer run the LPN finding a warrant. The government fails on inevitable discovery here. United States v. Warner, 2025 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 210974 (D.N.M. … Continue reading

Posted in Discovery, Inevitable discovery, Reasonable suspicion | Comments Off on D.N.M.: Running LPN after handcuffing failed inevitable discovery

W.D.Tex.: Frequency of cell searches not a 4A claim

“Plaintiff complains of cell searches that are unscheduled or more frequent than she believes they should be. Such a claim does not state a constitutional violation. Even assuming that TDCJ policy dictates the frequency of searches, additional searches are not … Continue reading

Posted in Issue preclusion, Prison and jail searches, Reasonable suspicion, Seizure | Comments Off on W.D.Tex.: Frequency of cell searches not a 4A claim

C.D.Cal.: Private case subpoenas not 4A issue

A private party issuing subpoenas in a civil case is not subject to the Fourth Amendment. Rodney v. TransUnion LLC., 2025 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 211570 (C.D. Cal. Sep. 2, 2025). This Walmart store’s asset protection person was considered a reliable … Continue reading

Posted in Arrest or entry on arrest, Informant hearsay, Issue preclusion, Subpoenas / Nat'l Security Letters | Comments Off on C.D.Cal.: Private case subpoenas not 4A issue