WY: It was reasonable for officer to believe backpack behind driver was his for consent search; no objection from passenger

Defense counsel was not ineffective for not filing a motion to suppress the search of his backpack in the car of another when the other consented to a search of the car. Defendant’s backpack was behind the driver, not him, and he didn’t object and nobody said it wasn’t the driver’s backpack. It was logical for the officers to assume it belonged to the driver. Lemley v. State, 2016 WY 65, 2016 Wyo. LEXIS 74 (June 29, 2016).

Defendant was suspected of arson of a truck, and the police obtained his CSLI by court order with probable cause. The showing of probable cause was adequate to tie defendant to the truck fire. The showing was made before the state court required a PC showing. His phone records required only a subpoena. Commonwealth v. Balboni, 2016 Mass. App. LEXIS 78 (July 1, 2016).*

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