FL1: No Fourth Amendment or state law violation for P2P CP trolling to cross jurisdictional lines

A municipal police officer trolling P2P connections found child pornography on defendant’s computer. When she got the IP address, it was apparent the computer was located in another municipality nearby. The Fourth Amendment wasn’t violated by her extraterritorial examination of defendant’s computer where the search warrant was executed by officers in the city where it was located. [This discussion may be only pertinent for state statutes on jurisdiction; under Virginia v. Moore, the answer is obvious.] Knight v. State, 2014 Fla. App. LEXIS 20730 (Fla. 1st DCA December 22, 2014).

Defendant was a passenger in a vehicle lawfully stopped, but the stop was unlawfully continued solely on nervousness. The search of his backpack was unreasonable, and there were no intervening circumstances. State v. Clemons, 2014 Ore. App. LEXIS 1772 (December 17, 2014).*

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