Mother’s consent of search of adult son’s locked room he tried to exclude her from was still valid

Defendant lived with his mother and locked her out of the house. She called the police, and she was shaking and upset when they arrived. One of the officers went through a window to get in and offered to do a search of the premises to make sure she was safe, which she agreed to. This was a valid third party consent. The mother told the officers that she was told by her son that she could not go upstairs, which was locked, and the officers even removed the door from the hinges to get upstairs. State v. Wurm, 2007 Wisc. App. LEXIS 1086 (December 11, 2007):*

The room searched was the upstairs of the home in which Evelyn lived, and not a detached apartment [thereby distinguishing defendant’s authority]. While Evelyn stated that Wurm did not like her to go upstairs, she also testified that she stored pictures there. Further, Wurm did not pay rent but paid some of the bills. Based on these facts, we conclude that the circuit court properly found that Evelyn had the authority to consent to the search of the upstairs of her home. The circuit court correctly denied Wurm’s motion to suppress …

A stop of three men in a pickup truck for a seatbelt violation at 2 a.m., without more, is not cause for a patdown of anybody. When defendant, however, resisted his patdown (not just objecting to it), the officer had cause for a patdown. State v. Anderson, 2007 Iowa App. LEXIS 1312 (December 12, 2007).* Comment: So, the officer was not legally authorized to pat down any of these three men, but he can get away with it if one resists or nothing is found. If a weapon is found, the officer is safer; if drugs are found, the defendant is charged. The bottom line here is that this opinion will do little or nothing to change police procedure in Iowa.

DUI roadblock was validly approved and established [even under Tennessee’s more rigorous procedures]. State v. Boddie, 2007 Tenn. Crim. App. LEXIS 935 ( December 11, 2007).*

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