MO: [Like hundreds of other cases,] Furtive movement to passenger seat during stop justifies longer detention

Defendant’s traffic stop had a factual basis, and his furtive movements to the passenger seat made a slightly longer investigative detention valid. State v. Perry, 2014 Mo. App. LEXIS 1040 (September 23, 2014).

An officer and a CPS worker came to defendant’s house on a report of unmanaged children and a possible working meth lab and they were granted consent to search by defendant’s live-in girlfriend. The chemical smell in the garage was apparently coming from a freshly painted motorcycle, but the officer kept looking and found the telltale signs of a meth lab (battery shavings, and HCl generator in a grill, camping fuel, and starter fluid). The consent was valid. Bulthuis v. State, 2014 Ind. App. LEXIS 472 (September 23, 2014).*

Defendant was stopped for an illegal turn, and calling in his DL showed it was suspended. That led to a valid tow and inventory per city department policy. People v. Vaughn, 2014 CO 71, 2014 Colo. LEXIS 860 (September 22, 2014).*

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