Author Archives: Hall

DE: Challenge to search after PG doesn’t show actual innocence

After acquired information that a cell site simulator might have been misused doesn’t show actual innocence or undermine guilty plea. “The appellant pleaded guilty, and his assertion that he has new evidence that law enforcement illegally or improperly used cell-site … Continue reading

Posted in Cell site location information, Cell site simulators, Good faith exception, Issue preclusion, Tracking warrant | Comments Off on DE: Challenge to search after PG doesn’t show actual innocence

D.D.C.: Merely touching a car trying to see inside it with a flashlight wasn’t a trespass

Police touching defendant’s car when the police looked in it and saw a gun wasn’t a trespass under Jones, and then they forced their way in. Jones involved installing a tracking device on the car. This is not a “ringing … Continue reading

Posted in Plain view, feel, smell, Trespass | Comments Off on D.D.C.: Merely touching a car trying to see inside it with a flashlight wasn’t a trespass

LA2: Anonymous report of man with a gun without some other possible crime is not RS

An anonymous tip that a man had a gun wasn’t reasonable suspicion. There was no report of any crime being committed at the time. State v. McCall, 2024 La. App. LEXIS 27 (La. App. 2 Cir. Jan. 10, 2024). Defendant … Continue reading

Posted in Franks doctrine, Plain view, feel, smell, Pretext, Reasonable suspicion | Comments Off on LA2: Anonymous report of man with a gun without some other possible crime is not RS

DE: Cell tower dump was reasonable under 4A

Defendant was convicted of robbery and kidnapping of a woman from her apartment complex to go to her ATM machine. Police got cell tower dumps for the nearest towers to the occurrence at the specific times to locate cell phones … Continue reading

Posted in Cell phones, Consent, Ineffective assistance, Seizure | Comments Off on DE: Cell tower dump was reasonable under 4A

CA11: Austrian SW executed in Austria couldn’t be questioned here under “act of state” doctrine

Plaintiff, apparently while in the United States, had his property in Austria searched by Austrian authorities with an Austrian search warrant. [Aside from what jurisdiction is there here?,] The “act of state” doctrine prohibits a U.S. court from questioning the … Continue reading

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TX1: Arrest on PC when standing next to vehicle justified its search incident

Defendant’s arrest for a parole violation while he was standing next to his vehicle resulted in a search of the person finding drugs, and that justified a search incident of the vehicle, too. Badyrka v. State, 2024 Tex. App. LEXIS … Continue reading

Posted in Arrest or entry on arrest, Franks doctrine, Qualified immunity, Search incident | Comments Off on TX1: Arrest on PC when standing next to vehicle justified its search incident

OH11: Running passenger’s ID through database didn’t violate Rodriguez

With no Ohio cases on point, looking to federal cases, the court concludes that running the passenger’s ID too was incidental to the stop and didn’t unreasonably extend it. State v. Foti, 2024-Ohio-39, 2024 Ohio App. LEXIS 47 (11th Dist. … Continue reading

Posted in Cell phones, Informant hearsay | Comments Off on OH11: Running passenger’s ID through database didn’t violate Rodriguez

Reason: Study Estimates Roadside Drug Tests Result in 30,000 Wrongful Arrests Every Year

Reason: Study Estimates Roadside Drug Tests Result in 30,000 Wrongful Arrests Every Year by C.J. Ciaramella (“Roughly 30,000 people every year may be getting wrongfully arrested and jailed because of police departments’ widespread use of unreliable roadside field tests for … Continue reading

Posted in Arrest or entry on arrest, Drug or alcohol testing | Comments Off on Reason: Study Estimates Roadside Drug Tests Result in 30,000 Wrongful Arrests Every Year

CA6: Arrest on a PV warrant permits search incident

A parole violation warrant permits a search incident to the arrest. United States v. Henderson, 2024 U.S. App. LEXIS 362 (6th Cir. Jan. 4, 2024) (applying Michigan law) (and after all, the defendant’s going to jail). Stopping with the front … Continue reading

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FL6: Trial court erred by de novo review of SW application

The trial court conducted a de novo review of the search warrant application, not seeing whether there was a substantial basis for finding probable cause. This was error. State v. Freeman, 2024 Fla. App. LEXIS 115 (Fla. 6th DCA Jan. … Continue reading

Posted in Burden of proof, Probable cause, Reasonable suspicion | Comments Off on FL6: Trial court erred by de novo review of SW application

N.D.Iowa: Police car pulling up with activated blue and red lights wasn’t necessarily a seizure; here, it is not

“I conclude that a law enforcement officer’s activation of red and blue emergency does not, by itself, establish a seizure for Fourth Amendment purposes. However, it is a factor that weighs in favor of finding a seizure. Certain other facts … Continue reading

Posted in Franks doctrine, Seizure | Comments Off on N.D.Iowa: Police car pulling up with activated blue and red lights wasn’t necessarily a seizure; here, it is not

OH2: Municipal Court can’t issue SW for out-of-state records

An Ohio municipal court does not have authority to issue a search warrant for collection of records from out of state. State v. Worthan, 2024-Ohio-21, 2024 Ohio App. LEXIS 33 (2d Dist. Jan. 5, 2024). Defendant approached the officers and … Continue reading

Posted in Probable cause, Seizure, Warrant execution, Warrant requirement | Comments Off on OH2: Municipal Court can’t issue SW for out-of-state records

OH1: Intercepted jail call led to def’s arrest and search when he showed up at co-def’s house to move drugs

Jailers intercepted a jail call between an inmate and a confederate outside who was told to move the drugs from his house. Police surveilled the house. When defendant showed up with a backpack and came out of the house, there … Continue reading

Posted in Prison and jail searches, Probable cause, Reasonable suspicion | Comments Off on OH1: Intercepted jail call led to def’s arrest and search when he showed up at co-def’s house to move drugs

WaPo: Google location data was used to find Jan. 6 rioters. It’s disappearing.

WaPo: Google location data was used to find Jan. 6 rioters. It’s disappearing. by Rachel Weinerand Drew Harwell (“Special counsel Jack Smith has a plan for how to illustrate Donald Trump’s influence over the rioters who stormed the U.S. Capitol … Continue reading

Posted in Geolocation data | Comments Off on WaPo: Google location data was used to find Jan. 6 rioters. It’s disappearing.

DC: Frisk of jacket in car was without RS

Defendant was a passenger in a rideshare, and the car was stopped for a traffic offense. They were all ordered out, and defendant took off his jacket while “blading,” said the officer, and left it in the car. The officer … Continue reading

Posted in Inventory, Reasonable suspicion, Scope of search, Stop and frisk | Comments Off on DC: Frisk of jacket in car was without RS

NY3: Entry into def’s stairwell was apparently illegal, but officers knocked at the door at the top of the stairs and got consent; this was attenuated

Officers entered the stairwell up to defendant’s second floor apartment. It was contended that the entry was unreasonable because the stairwell was part of defendant’s tenancy. At the top of the stairs, however, officers knocked and gained consent to enter. … Continue reading

Posted in Attenuation, Exclusionary rule | Comments Off on NY3: Entry into def’s stairwell was apparently illegal, but officers knocked at the door at the top of the stairs and got consent; this was attenuated

CA2: Dog sniff of def’s car in driveway was done in GF reliance on law at time

Acting on a tip, officers did a dog sniff of defendant’s covered car parked in his driveway, and they used that to get a warrant for it. Collins didn’t come along until the following year. The officers laid it all … Continue reading

Posted in Dog sniff, Good faith exception, Reasonable suspicion, Staleness | Comments Off on CA2: Dog sniff of def’s car in driveway was done in GF reliance on law at time

D.Minn.: SW arguably included use of cell site simulator to track phone; GFE applied in any event

The state issued warrant here authorized the use of a cell site simulator, but this wasn’t explicitly stated in the affidavit for warrant. And, the affidavit wasn’t incorporated into the warrant either. This is a close question. The court comes … Continue reading

Posted in Cell site simulators, Custody, Good faith exception, Probable cause | Comments Off on D.Minn.: SW arguably included use of cell site simulator to track phone; GFE applied in any event

D.Minn.: Def’s PC suppression argument showed a trial defense, not an argment for suppression

Defendant’s objection to the R&R isn’t enough to overrule the USMJ’s finding there was probable cause. Defendant presents a trial defense, not a defense to probable cause. United States v. Cole, 2024 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 752 (D. Minn. Jan. 3, … Continue reading

Posted in Emergency / exigency, Ineffective assistance | Comments Off on D.Minn.: Def’s PC suppression argument showed a trial defense, not an argment for suppression

D.Neb.: A SW affidavit is evaluated for PC based on what it contains, not what it lacks

A search warrant affidavit is evaluated for probable cause based on what it contains, not what it lacks. United States v. Daigle, 947 F.3d 1076, 1081 (8th Cir. 2020). Moreover, the good faith exception applies. There was enough information to … Continue reading

Posted in Nexus, Plain view, feel, smell, Probable cause | Comments Off on D.Neb.: A SW affidavit is evaluated for PC based on what it contains, not what it lacks