D.R.I.: Threat that def could lose kids to state if she didn’t consent made it involuntary

Consent was not voluntary where the officer told defendant that DCYF might take her kids. Had police sought a search warrant, there was no nexus. “The Court finds that law enforcement could not have shown a sufficient nexus between Almonte’s alleged drug transaction and his residence that would have enabled them to meet the probable cause standard for a search warrant. Therefore, the evidence recovered from Almonte’s residence is suppressed.” United States v. Almonte, 2020 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 66293 (D. R.I. Apr. 15, 2020).

Defendant’s wife had actual authority to consent to seizure of his clothes from the floor of the house after he admitted to her that he was having an affair and apparently killed his girlfriend. His wife called the police. As to his socks with blood spots seized from the hospital, the state fails to support this seizure under plain view under Jacobson. As to the latter, however, harmless error applies because the victim’s blood was found on the sweatshirt, too. State v. Abbott, 2020 Wisc. App. LEXIS 156 (Apr. 16, 2020).

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