Category Archives: F.R.Crim.P. 41

S.D.Ga.: Computer generated signature on a search warrant not Fourth Amendment violation

Defendant is charged with arranging the murder of her soldier husband on a military base, and a military judge issued a search warrant. The fact the warrant had a computer generated signature is not a constitutional error. There is no … Continue reading

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CA9: Once criminal proceedings are over, the original search isn’t an issue in Rule 41(g) proceedings for return of property

Defendant’s Rule 41(g) motion was granted in part and denied in part. The district court did not err in refusing to reconsider the original search question. “[I]n the context of Rule 41, that after criminal proceedings are completed, ‘the legality … Continue reading

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D.Minn.: Emergency lights alone doesn’t prove a “stop”; defendant was already parked

Defendant was already parked, so he wasn’t stopped, and the officer’s use of the emergency lights on his police car are not determinative of whether there was a “stop.” There was no display of weapons, touching of defendant, no coercive … Continue reading

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D.N.D.: Failure to record conversation with USMJ that address needed correction not ground to suppress

Officers discovered that the address in the search warrant was incorrect before the warrant issued, and the USMJ corrected it on the warrant. The failure to record that conversation while a Rule 41 violation and not a Fourth Amendment violation … Continue reading

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D.Nev.: Def doesn’t show factual basis for any exclusion for Rule 41 violation

Defendant’s motion to suppress for a Rule 41 violation is denied as untimely. Even on the merits, it shows no factual basis for exclusion. United States v. Williams, 2014 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 75567 (D. Nev. February 14, 2014): Williams’ motion … Continue reading

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E.D.Mo.: Rule 41(g) on return of property doesn’t provide for suppression of evidence

Rule 41(g) on return of property doesn’t provide for suppression of evidence. The evidence seized is presumptively validly retained, and the burden is on the search target to show why it should be returned. Here, they didn’t meet that burden. … Continue reading

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D.Vt.: No Fourth Amendment or Rule 41 right to see warrant before execution

Executing officers’ failure to show the search warrant before the search doesn’t violate the Fourth Amendment. Rule 41 doesn’t even require it before hand. United States v. Wint, 2014 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 52108 (D. Vt. April 14, 2014):

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D.D.C. once again rejects email SW request as overbroad, original concerns still unaddressed

The government brings a second search warrant application for an email account, and it is rejected again as overbroad. The concerns of the prior opinion are not addressed. Also, the government’s contention that copying emails is not a “seizure” is … Continue reading

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M.D.Pa.: Failure to show SW not Fourth Amendment violation

Even if defendant was not shown a search warrant during the search (a fact in dispute), that’s not a ground to suppress. It violates Rule 41, but not the Fourth Amendment. United States v. Harley, 2014 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 49396 … Continue reading

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