OH7: Burning MJ coming from an apartment is a misdemeanor and not sufficient exigency to enter

Police answered a loud music call at 5 am in an apartment building, and they could smell burning marijuana outside defendant’s apartment door. Burning marijuana is a misdemeanor and not sufficient exigency for a police entry. A 1995 Ohio case so holds. State v. Ambrosini, 2015-Ohio-4150, 2015 Ohio App. LEXIS 4052 (7th Dist. Sept. 28, 2015).

Taking a voluntarily offered ID is a detention when the officer keeps it. Here the stop was for the passenger flicking ashes out a window, and that’s just not a basis for a stop. [Except maybe if a wildfire could result? Must depend on where.] People v. Linn, 2015 Cal. App. LEXIS 887 (1st Dist. Oct. 8, 2015).*

Defense counsel was not ineffective for not moving to suppress the search warrant because it allegedly lacked probable cause. The search was also conducted by defendant’s state parole officer, and defendant was charged in state court with possession of stolen property from the search. He was charged in federal court with felon in possession. The parole search justification was enough. United States v. Cornelison, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 138211 (W.D.Ark. Aug. 28, 2015).*

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