ND: Visitor’s purse could be searched on execution of SW for house for drugs

The affidavit for search warrant named defendant’s house but not his name. The probable cause was for drugs. Once inside, there was a woman visiting. Officers could search her purse as a part of the warrant. [The specification of name of occupants is dicta because it also talks about closed parts of premises that might belong to others, something not an issue here.] State v. Taylor, 2015 ND 100, 2015 N.D. LEXIS 95 (April 28, 2015).

All the officer here had was a hunch that the people in an SUV were involved in some crime. There had been a report of a fight with an SUV involved, but this wasn’t even the same color. The occupants of this one and another were talking to each other, but that doesn’t add anything. Reasonable suspicion is a low threshold, and it isn’t met here. United States v. Jones, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 55829 (D.Ore. April 16, 2015).*

This entry was posted in Scope of search, Warrant execution. Bookmark the permalink.

Comments are closed.