CA3: Officers had PC to believe ptf was in a motor home for entry to arrest

Plaintiff was calling police dispatch from a cell phone. Dispatch was able to trace the cell phone apparently via the 911 system. Officers had an arrest warrant for plaintiff, and they had probable cause to believe that she was in a motor home and not a dwelling, sufficient for entry for an arrest warrant. The motor home likely had a lesser expectation of privacy than a dwelling, and the court finds the officers had qualified immunity. [Note: Qualified immunity was unnecessary. If they had an arrest warrant for plaintiff and probable cause to believe she was in the motor home, even treating it the same as a home, the entry was justified, and any qualified immunity analysis is unnecessary. Paoli v. Stetser, 2016 U.S. App. LEXIS 10369 (3d Cir. June 8, 2016).

Defendant was not unreasonably held during a valid traffic stop with reasonable use of a drug dog. He was in the car, the dog alerted outside the car, he was searched twice finding nothing, but his companions said that he had drugs hidden in his buttocks. People v. Pettis, 2016 IL App (4th) 140469, 2016 Ill. App. LEXIS 343 (June 8, 2016).*

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