S.D.Cal.: RS was too close a call, and, if the court doesn’t suppress, anybody could be stopped

Reasonable suspicion was a close call, but not enough to justify the stop. If the court doesn’t suppress, everything might end up as reasonable suspicion. United States v. Aguilera, 2017 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 145199 (S.D. Cal. Sept. 7, 2017)*:

The Court has no doubt that the experienced agents following the F-150 believed that the truck might contain illegal aliens. The question is whether this suspicion was sufficiently particularized to justify the stop of the defendants, or whether it was merely a hunch. This is an extremely close call given the information known by the agents about the stash house and the fact that the F-150 was observed leaving the house and then proceeding westbound on Interstate 8. However, the Court finds the totality of the evidence lacking with respect to individualized suspicion that these particular defendants were engaged in criminal activity. To hold otherwise would support the stop of virtually any vehicle seen leaving the G Street residence, a result that cannot be consistent with the Fourth Amendment.

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