SCOTUSBlog: The dog sniff at the center of a Supreme Court petition

SCOTUSBlog: The dog sniff at the center of a Supreme Court petition by Kelsey Dallas:

The traffic stop started with a dirty license plate. Logan Camp, a police officer in Winterset, Iowa, pulled over Ashlee Mumford on March 5, 2022, because he couldn’t make out two of the numbers on her plate.

But once he stopped Mumford’s car, Camp investigated more than her license, registration, insurance, and plate. He called in the police department’s canine handler and asked Mumford and her passenger to get out of the vehicle.

The handler, Christian Dekker, soon arrived with Orozco, a certified drug-detection dog, and they walked around the exterior of Mumford’s car for 15 to 20 seconds. Along the passenger side, “Orozco briefly rose on his hind legs, put his paws on the passenger door, and his nose ‘momentarily, almost imperceptibly’ crossed the plane of the open window,” according to a Supreme Court brief filed by the state of Iowa in Mumford v. Iowa. The dog alerted Dekker to the presence of drugs, prompting a search of Mumford’s purse and car. Ultimately, Mumford was charged with possession of methamphetamine, marijuana, and drug paraphernalia and then convicted of marijuana and drug paraphernalia possession (but acquitted of possession of meth.)

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