S.D.Cal.: Hotel room qualified as temporary residence for parole search

A parolee was staying in a hotel room between residences, and the officers had probable cause to believe that evidence of counterfeiting would be found there. Therefore, the hotel room qualified as a temporary residence subject to parole search. United States v. Eibeck, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 28825 (S.D.Cal. February 25, 2015).

In this case, a police officer was terminated for jamming his nightstick into a suspect’s mouth in violation of the department’s code of ethics: “Police officers will never employ unnecessary force or violence and will use only such force in the discharge of duty as is reasonable in all circumstances. While the use of force is occasionally unavoidable, police officers will refrain from applying the unnecessary infliction of pain or suffering and will never engage in cruel, degrading, or inhuman treatment of any person.” The excuse was that the suspect supposedly had ingested three rocks of crack. Then, they let him go without medical treatment. Melkowski v. Bd. of Police Comm’rs of Kan. City, 2015 Mo. App. LEXIS 264 (March 10, 2015).*

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