IN: Parent can consent to search of minor child’s bedroom

“As a matter of first impression in Indiana, we hold that it is reasonable under the Fourth Amendment for an officer to rely on the voluntary consent of a minor’s parent to search the minor’s bedroom inside the parent’s home.” R.B. v. State, 2015 Ind. App. LEXIS 622 (September 11, 2015) (see Treatise § 12.41 By parent; “my house, my rules”).

While an arrest warrant is always preferred, officers do not need to procure one when it’s not possible. Here it was for a shoplifting arrest, and that led to a valid search incident. State v. Paananen, 2015 N.M. LEXIS 280 (September 10, 2015).

Defendant was stopped because radar showed him going 66 in a 65. He argued both pretext and that the radar device could have been off with a standard margin of error of one mile per hour. The court credits the officer that there was objective justification for the stop so pretext fails. United States v. Fuehrer, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 121636 ( August 20, 2015).*

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