M.D.Fla.: Consent was spontaneous, but where DL was not clear

While the record is not clear that the defendant’s DL remained with the officer when consent was granted, it was seemingly spontaneous and that supported voluntariness. United States v. Cusick, 2012 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 133687 (M.D. Fla. September 19, 2012).* Note: The court minimizes the factual issue of the DL being in the officer’s hand on the question of “free to leave.” With the PATRIOT Act and everybody seemingly requiring a driver’s license to conduct everyday business, one simply is not free to leave when his DL is in the officer’s hand. This is as much or more a seizure of the person as seizure of the suitcase of a traveler in Place interferes with travel. Indeed, if you asked officers what they would do if the motorist drove off without the license, it is a virtual certainty that they would stop the motorist for driving without a license or for just being suspicious. This is important. Watch for it.

“A novel [Fourth Amendment] issue alone cannot be the basis of finding complexity” for excess compensation for appointed counsel under the Criminal Justice Act. United States v. Brandwein, 2012 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 133926 (W.D. Mo. September 19, 2012).*

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