AF: Inevitable discovery validated finding CP while looking for text messages with minor

The search authorization was valid for text messages between defendant and a supposed 14-year-old girl. The AFOSI investigator found child pornography in what was thus found to be plain view. Even if, arguendo, the officer was looking for child pornography, the search wasn’t invalid. “As to the application of the inevitable discovery exception, the military judge was ‘satisfied that the Magistrate would have granted the expanded Search Authorization’ based on the image or description provided. Again, we agree.” United States v. Maske, 2018 CCA LEXIS 144 (A.F. Ct. Crim. App. Mar. 25, 2018).

A janitor working in an office building hid a camera in the women’s bathroom, and actually captured video of many women. The camera was found, it was narrowed to him, and his house was searched and video seized. He bailed out and fled the country. Those who couldn’t prove their images were captured could still maintain an intrusion on seclusion claim, following other states. The tort of intrusion of seclusion derives from the Fourteenth Amendment and common law. Friedman v. Martinez, 2018 N.J. Super. LEXIS 49 (Mar. 23, 2018).

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