OR: Mail recipient has a possessory interest in mail in transit; removing it from mail stream for dog sniff was unreasonable (under state constitution)

A US mail recipient has a constitutionally protected privacy interest in the package in transit under the Oregon Constitution, looking to Ex parte Jackson (1877). The package was effectively and unlawfully seized at the Portland airport mail facility for separate examination and a dog sniff. State v. Barnthouse , 360 Ore. 403 (Oct. 6, 2016).

Chicago PD with the DEA Task Force received CI information that a woman named Santos would be flying from San Diego to Chicago with drugs and staying at a particular hotel at some undisclosed time. They checked with the hotel and found she had a reservation for that day and they staked out the hotel. A cab left her off there. Officers watched her room and then a black Escalade showed up to pick her up. They tailed the car then stopped it for speeding. The driver consented. The information was corroborated enough to ask for consent. There was reasonable suspicion before the stop for speeding. The CI’s information was thus corroborated. People v. Duran, 2016 IL App (1st) 152678, 2016 Ill. App. LEXIS 703 (Oct. 7, 2016).*

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