MO: Quarles doesn’t apply by plain words of statute to juvenile interrogations

The juvenile law’s provisions for a rights warning is mandatory, and the court declines to imply a public safety exception under Quarles. In Interest of J.L.H., 2016 Mo. App. LEXIS 211 (March 8, 2016).

Plaintiff’s Fourth Amendment prison cell search claim over taking his civil complaint papers doesn’t survive. Simmons v. Szelewski, 2016 U.S. App. LEXIS 4239 (3d Cir. March 7, 2016).

Police received a predawn anonymous tip of a man in a silver car waving a gun in an apartment building’s parking lot. He arrived and saw the likely car, and it moved when the officer was seen. The officer got out and walked to the car to inquire and there was a gun in plain view. All this was reasonable. Grayson v. State, 2016 Ind. App. LEXIS 58 (March 8, 2016).*

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