“Have a good evening” and turning to go back to patrol car ended stop

Officer saying “Have a good evening” and turning to go back to patrol car before returning was a sufficient break in causation to make the consent independent. State v. Cameron, 2008 Wisc. App. LEXIS 47 (January 23, 2008).* (Comment: I refuse to buy into this. A motorist never feels free to leave as long as he or she is being spoken to by a cop.)

Anonymous tip corroborated by prior knowledge of defendant’s drug activity supported reasonable suspicion. Coupled with flight, that was enough. Commonwealth v. Morgan, 248 S.W.3d 538 (Ky. 2008):

Sheriff Staples stated that his stop of Morgan and Evans was based on the totality of three factors: the anonymous tip specifically identifying Morgan, Evans, and Mansfield as engaging in drug-related activity; his prior knowledge about the suspects’ drug-related arrests and convictions; and their attempt to elude the police by leaving Morgan’s trailer. After considering the totality of the circumstances, we find that Staples’s prior knowledge and his observations of Morgan and Evans adequately corroborated the anonymous tip. Therefore, Staples possessed the requisite reasonable suspicion that Morgan and Evans were engaging in criminal activity to justify his investigatory stop.

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