GA: Def didn’t consent: he was alternately mumbling and screaming incomprehensibly and choking and vomiting

Defendant who was handcuffed and held to the ground, alternately mumbling and screaming incomprehensibly, and vomiting or choking at times didn’t consent. State v. Osterloh, 2017 Ga. App. LEXIS 396 (Aug. 30, 2017).*

The warrantless entry into defendant’s apartment violated the Fourth Amendment because the officers did not have probable cause to conclude that another individual in the apartment was the occupant of a stolen car or had committed any other crime before they entered the apartment and saw the contraband. The fact that the other individual met the vague description given by an informant and fled upon sight of the officers, without more, was not enough for probable cause to arrest. While the informant’s tip certainly warranted police investigation, further observation and corroboration was required to connect the other individual to the stolen car before officers had probable cause to arrest him. Heitkamp v. State, 2017 Ga. App. LEXIS 397 (Aug. 31, 2017).*

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