W.D.Ark.: Defendant consented to entry and search of a gun cabinet, not knowing she’d violated law in buying the guns

Defendant consented to an entry for ICE officers to look for her illegal alien husband. They saw ammunition and asked about guns, and she showed them the guns in a gun cabinet owned by her husband she had access to. She was arrested for admitting to buying guns for him and aiding his possession which she said she did not know was against the law[; thereby implying voluntariness because she didn’t think she did anything wrong]. United States v. Valencia, 2011 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 104766 (W.D. Ark. August 22, 2011).*

Defendant’s stop was justified by following too close, which the officer suspected was a tandem drug run. Once the car was stopped, reasonable suspicion developed from extreme nervousness, a rented car, the appearance of stuff in the car indicating “hard travel” that they were driving long distances without stopping, inconsistent stories, and signs of tampering with the cowl as a place to hide drugs. Then there came consent. Motion to suppress denied. United States v. Bryant, 2011 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 104507 (N.D. Tex. September 9, 2011).*

Defense counsel was not ineffective for not forecasting Gant which came later, but that is moot anyway because of Davis v. United States finding pre-Gant searches valid. Jeter v. United States, 2011 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 104943 (D. S.C. September 15, 2011).*

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