OH9: Active smelly meth cook in motel exigency to kick in door

An officer was called to a motel because there was alleged to be an active methamphetamine cook going on in a room giving off a strong odor everybody could smell. When the occupants wouldn’t open the door, he kicked it in. An active meth cook is exigency. State v. Armbruster, 2013 Ohio 3119, 2013 Ohio App. LEXIS 3168 (9th Dist. July 17, 2013).

During prison visitation, defendant was seen likely removing something white from his child’s pants while the child was sitting on his lap and putting it in his mouth. The guards reviewed the video and couldn’t be sure. Nevertheless, they terminated the visitation. “Carlton was placed in a ‘dry cell’ and it was later determined that his feces contained fragments of white latex rubber as well as marijuana. Latex rubber balloons containing marijuana were found discarded in the lobby of the prison and in the interview room where Anderson had been interviewed.” The motion to suppress the stuff found in the lobby he hardly could object to. The search of his feces was reasonable. United States v. Carlton, 2013 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 99299 (W.D. La. March 6, 2013).

Defendant’s consent was valid. He signed four, not just one, consent forms, and he’d previously spontaneously said “That’s me” when shown an ATM photo of the suspected fraudster. United States v. Bazile, 2013 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 99780 (S.D. Fla. June 28, 2013).*

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