OR: Being ordered to walk backwards toward officer with hands up is a seizure

The juvenile being ordered to walk backwards to the officer with hands up is a seizure, and here it was with reasonable suspicion. P.L. v. C.P.L. (In re C.), 346 Or. App. 499 (Jan. 22, 2026) (argued 18 months ago).

Merely handling a cell phone while driving is not reasonable suspicion the operator is violating the use of cell phone law. More is required. State v. Stone, 2026 Md. LEXIS 10 (Jan. 27, 2026).*

The court refuses to impose a negative inference on the officer’s testimony where this patrol car had no MVR. This is somewhat similar to not recording the act that led to the stop, for instance. State v. Williams, 2026 Del. Super. LEXIS 31 (Jan. 28, 2026).*

Mere violation of state statute on BAC tests doesn’t warrant suppression when the testing is otherwise reasonable under the Fourth Amendment. Delatorre v. City of Ketchikan, 2026 Alas. App. LEXIS 12 (Jan. 28, 2026).*

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