TX2: Taking car keys doesn’t make an investigative detention a custodial arrest

“[A]n officer’s confiscation of a suspect’s keys during an investigative detention does not automatically escalate the stop into a custodial arrest.” Here, it was a DUI stop and taking the keys was for safety reasons. Bwondara v. State, 2025 Tex. App. LEXIS 9890 (Tex. App. – Ft. Worth Dec. 23, 2025).

Defendant was a police officer tried and acquitted in state court for the shooting death of Breonna Taylor. Then he was tried federally for a civil rights violation and convicted of violating her Fourth Amendment rights. He gets bail pending appeal. If he succeeds on one issue, he can’t be retried. If on the other, there’s a new trial. There is a strong presumption of detention, but government agrees this is extraordinary. United States v. Hankison, 2025 U.S. App. LEXIS 33314 (6th Cir. Dec. 19, 2025).*

The proof of connection between defendant and the murder victim was so substantial, including defendant’s DNA practically everywhere, the CSLI doesn’t add much of anything. Tandy v. State, 2025 Ind. App. LEXIS 421 (Dec. 22, 2025).*

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