N.D.Ga.: Defendant argued with officer, shoved him down, and ran away from the traffic stop; the car was thus abandoned

Defendant was stopped for a traffic offense, and when the officer approached, defendant said “Why the f*** are you stopping me?”, and he started to get out of the car. The officer did not like his aggressive tone, and the officer tried to keep defendant in the car. Defendant succeeded in getting the door open and knocking the officer down. The officer Maced him as he ran off. This was an abandonment of the car, which was lawfully impounded and inventoried. United States v. Jefferson, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 105628 (N.D. Ga. May 25, 2010).*

Defendant’s admission about there being a meth pipe was suppressible, but the evidence would have inevitably been found during the ongoing execution of the search warrant at his house. United States v. Rodriguez, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 106417 (D. S.D. September 9, 2010).*

Defendant was stopped for a host of traffic offenses, and he argued that the police were actually more interested in him because of suspected drug activity. Well, that’s just irrelevant under the Fourth Amendment since he gave them probable cause to stop him for the traffic offenses. United States v. Mendoza, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 105570 (S.D. Iowa June 4, 2010).*

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