Category Archives: Reasonableness

CA9: Two questions about weapons in car was for officer safety and not unreasonable

Twice asking defendant during a traffic stop about weapons was not minimally burdensome and not unreasonable when defendant had prior for weapons. United States v. Taylor, 2023 U.S. App. LEXIS 4954 (9th Cir. Mar. 1, 2023):

Posted in Reasonableness | Comments Off on CA9: Two questions about weapons in car was for officer safety and not unreasonable

WI: REP in apt building’s storage room def shared with another that she put the lock on

Defendant had a reasonable expectation of privacy in an apartment’s basement storage room that was shared with another but which defendant put a padlock on. State v. Eder, 2023 Wisc. App. LEXIS 207 (Feb. 28, 2023). There was probable cause … Continue reading

Posted in Automobile exception, Reasonable expectation of privacy, Reasonableness | Comments Off on WI: REP in apt building’s storage room def shared with another that she put the lock on

CA10: No fixed time to write the ticket under Rodriguez

The traffic stop was justified, and the district court was correct in holding what happened during the ticket writing phase didn’t deviate from the primary mission of the stop. There’s no fixed rule on the amount of time it could … Continue reading

Posted in Reasonableness | Comments Off on CA10: No fixed time to write the ticket under Rodriguez

CA9: Denying owner access to an impounded car for 30 days is an unreasonable seizure

Denying access to one’s car for 30 days after impoundment without justification was an unreasonable seizure under the Fourth Amendment. Untalan v. Stanley, 2023 U.S. App. LEXIS 4070 (9th Cir. Feb. 22, 2023). CI information led to surveillance then two … Continue reading

Posted in Ineffective assistance, Inventory, Probable cause, Reasonable suspicion, Reasonableness, Seizure | Comments Off on CA9: Denying owner access to an impounded car for 30 days is an unreasonable seizure

KY: SW not required for medical question answers at book-in

Defendant had only a limited privacy interest in his medical records from questions asked during the book-in process at jail. Getting his medical information was incident to his detention for his arrest for a fatal collision that killed a police … Continue reading

Posted in Prison and jail searches, Reasonableness | Comments Off on KY: SW not required for medical question answers at book-in

W.D.N.Y.: 108-day delay in SW for cell phone was unreasonable

An unreasonable 108-day delay in retrieving defendant’s cell phone from local police after the DEA adopted the case required suppression of the search of the phone. United States v. Adams, 2023 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 23973 (W.D.N.Y. Feb. 13, 2023). Officers … Continue reading

Posted in Cell phones, Qualified immunity, Reasonable suspicion, Reasonableness, Warrant execution | Comments Off on W.D.N.Y.: 108-day delay in SW for cell phone was unreasonable

E.D.Va.: No 4A right to notice before a search occurs; state search law inapplicable in federal court

Defendant’s Fourth Amendment claim is that he was given no notice that his phones had been searched, citing Virginia law, which is irrelevant in a federal prosecution, even though state officials did all the searching. There’s no constitutional right to … Continue reading

Posted in Ineffective assistance, Informant hearsay, Reasonableness, Waiver, Warrant execution | Comments Off on E.D.Va.: No 4A right to notice before a search occurs; state search law inapplicable in federal court

CA11: Stop on RS can’t go on indef

A stop on reasonable suspicion cannot go on indefinitely. Here, there was video of an encounter but defendant deleted it from the phone of the victim. She’d sent it to another before that, and she was trying to get it … Continue reading

Posted in Reasonable suspicion, Reasonableness | Comments Off on CA11: Stop on RS can’t go on indef

GA: Sound of shuffling of feet after announcement of raid justified entry in 3 seconds; no weapons found

Officers entered within about three seconds after announcing and hearing shuffling of feet. Defendant was sitting on the couch, and there were no firearms. The test is whether there is a reasonable possible fear of firearms in the house that … Continue reading

Posted in Knock and announce, Reasonableness | Comments Off on GA: Sound of shuffling of feet after announcement of raid justified entry in 3 seconds; no weapons found

KY: 21-month delay for SW for cell phone not unreasonable where def in custody

Officers had probable cause and nexus and showed particularity to defendant’s cell phone. He’d previously been accused of recording undressed women and was involved in an upskirting. Here he’d been accused of sex with drugged women and recording some of … Continue reading

Posted in Exclusionary rule, Ineffective assistance, Inventory, Reasonableness | Comments Off on KY: 21-month delay for SW for cell phone not unreasonable where def in custody

CA4: Failure to turn on bodycam before frisk not shown to be in bad faith

Officer’s failure to turn on his bodycam before frisk here doesn’t require an adverse inference of destruction of evidence. Bad faith isn’t shown. United States v. Aguirre-Cuenca, 2023 U.S. App. LEXIS 1105 (4th Cir. Jan. 18, 2023). Defendant’s appeal is … Continue reading

Posted in Body cameras, Ineffective assistance, Issue preclusion, Reasonableness | Comments Off on CA4: Failure to turn on bodycam before frisk not shown to be in bad faith

CA10: Traffic stop to flirt with motorist was unreasonable, and clearly established that cause needed

The officer’s stop of plaintiff to flirt with her was without basis and thus unreasonable, and clearly established. Shepherd v. Robbins, 2022 U.S. App. LEXIS 36056 (10th Cir. Dec. 13, 2022) [corrected Dec. 28, 2022]. Defense counsel wasn’t ineffective for … Continue reading

Posted in Consent, Excessive force, Qualified immunity, Reasonableness | Comments Off on CA10: Traffic stop to flirt with motorist was unreasonable, and clearly established that cause needed

GA: Generalizations and experience do not support no-knock warrant

The no-knock provision in this search warrant was not based on a showing of necessity based on this case. It was based on experience and generalities. [In addition, defendant was supposedly standing in the front yard, so what about the … Continue reading

Posted in Emergency / exigency, Probable cause, Reasonableness | Comments Off on GA: Generalizations and experience do not support no-knock warrant

W.D.Okla.: Validity of a stop doesn’t depend on whether a traffic offense actually happened, just whether there is RS it did

“[T]he constitutionality of the stop does not depend on whether the driver did, in fact, commit a traffic violation. The standard is reasonable suspicion of wrongdoing. If an officer reasonably thinks he saw a driver commit a traffic infraction, then … Continue reading

Posted in Plain view, feel, smell, Protective sweep, Reasonable suspicion, Reasonableness | Comments Off on W.D.Okla.: Validity of a stop doesn’t depend on whether a traffic offense actually happened, just whether there is RS it did

CA8: “[E]ven if a technical violation of Nebraska law occurred when signing the warrant that is not a basis for suppressing the evidence” under 4A

“[E]ven if a technical violation of Nebraska law occurred when signing the warrant that is not a basis for suppressing the evidence” under the Fourth Amendment. United States v. Becker, 2022 U.S. App. LEXIS 35626 (8th Cir. Dec. 27, 2022). … Continue reading

Posted in Arrest or entry on arrest, Exclusionary rule, Probation / Parole search, Reasonableness, Seizure | Comments Off on CA8: “[E]ven if a technical violation of Nebraska law occurred when signing the warrant that is not a basis for suppressing the evidence” under 4A

NE: Police don’t have to decide the constitutionality of the laws they enforce

Police officers are not legal scholars, and they don’t have to guess as to the constitutionality of the laws they enforced. They need only act reasonably in reliance on statute or ordinance. State v. Albarenga, 313 Neb. 72 (Dec. 23, … Continue reading

Posted in Excessive force, Good faith exception, Reasonable suspicion, Reasonableness | Comments Off on NE: Police don’t have to decide the constitutionality of the laws they enforce

NY Daily News: NYPD settles lawsuit over unconstitutional warrant checks

NY Daily News: NYPD settles lawsuit over unconstitutional warrant checks (“Conducting a warrant check on someone without sufficient cause violates a person’s fourth amendment rights, civil rights attorneys say.”) WaPo: NYPD ends tactic of prolonging stops to check for warrants … Continue reading

Posted in Reasonable suspicion, Reasonableness, Seizure | Comments Off on NY Daily News: NYPD settles lawsuit over unconstitutional warrant checks

CA10: Traffic stop to flirt with a motorist violates clearly established law

A traffic stop to flirt with a motorist violates clearly established law. But this is a more complicated. “Ultimately, Plaintiff’s appeal rises and falls on the question of whether Defendant’s conduct violated clearly established law. To the degree that Defendant acted … Continue reading

Posted in Inventory, Qualified immunity, Reasonableness | Comments Off on CA10: Traffic stop to flirt with a motorist violates clearly established law

S.D.Cal.: Release condition with firearm restriction and search waiver did not violate 2A or 4A

Defendant’s release condition of a firearm restriction and Fourth Amendment waiver because of a prior misdemeanor firearms conviction doesn’t violate the Second Amendment under New York State Rifle & Pistol Association, Inc. v. Bruen (2022). Heller supports the court’s conclusion. … Continue reading

Posted in Arrest or entry on arrest, Good faith exception, Probable cause, Reasonableness | Comments Off on S.D.Cal.: Release condition with firearm restriction and search waiver did not violate 2A or 4A

IN: Mistake of law to an illegal search or seizure applies to the scope of the law, not whether it even exists

The mistake of law “defense” to an illegal search or seizure applies to the scope of the law, not whether it even exists. Here, it didn’t. White v. State, 2022 Ind. App. LEXIS 390 (Dec. 8, 2022). The specific characteristics … Continue reading

Posted in Burden of pleading, Burden of proof, Reasonable suspicion, Reasonableness | Comments Off on IN: Mistake of law to an illegal search or seizure applies to the scope of the law, not whether it even exists