S.D.N.Y.: When police come to def’s house with arrest warrant, cotenant’s denial he’s home isn’t binding on officers

Officers had good information where defendant lived, and they came with an arrest warrant. His cotenant denied he was there, which the officers did not have to take at face value. One FBI agent testified that cotenants frequently lie about the presence of the arrestee. Officers could then make a protective sweep and seize anything obviously incriminating. United States v. Murray, 2018 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 133830 (S.D. N.Y. Aug. 8, 2018).

Defendant on post-conviction failed to show that there was a plea offer he would have taken that wasn’t communicated to him. There was talk about defense counsel hinging the entire defense on the jurisdiction of the officers to even conduct the search at issue, but it was presented to the trial court as jurisdiction to try the case which was waived for failure to assert it pretrial. With the failure of proof on the alleged plea offer, the post-conviction claim fails. Smith v. State, 2018 Tenn. Crim. App. LEXIS 597 (Aug. 9, 2018).*

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