Daily Archives: January 22, 2020

Reason: Kentucky Lawmaker Wants To Give Police the Power to Detain People Who Don’t Answer Their Questions

Reason: Kentucky Lawmaker Wants To Give Police the Power to Detain People Who Don’t Answer Their Questions by Scott Shakford (“It’s an attempt to bypass Fourth and Fifth Amendment protections by insisting it’s not an arrest.”)

Posted in Seizure | Comments Off on Reason: Kentucky Lawmaker Wants To Give Police the Power to Detain People Who Don’t Answer Their Questions

TN: License to enter Bonaroo music festival included search waiver; no REP

Defendant’s campsite at the Bonaroo music festival and his car were searched on the authority of the license granted by the ticket which said that everybody there was subject to search. Because of that, his campsite had no reasonable expectation … Continue reading

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CA6: Game officers had PC to arrest ptf for night hunting with lights despite ptf winning some counts at state trial and state abandoning last one on his promise not to do it anymore

Officers had probable cause to arrest plaintiff for shining deer at night when he was spotted from an airplane on patrol. He was arrested for hunting under the influence and at night. He ultimately got counts dismissed, one for his … Continue reading

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CA8: Handcuffing a park jogger who was watching a traffic stop for not giving SSN was unreasonable

Handcuffing plaintiff for merely stopping to watch a St. Louis police officer conduct traffic stops in the park where he was jogging violated clearly established law on plaintiff’s facts. Walker v. City of Pine Bluff, 414 F.3d 989 (8th Cir. … Continue reading

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CA4: RS is the standard for a prison visitor strip search

Reasonable suspicion is the standard for a prison visitor strip search, and officers had reasonable suspicion here. Calloway v. Lokey, 2020 U.S. App. LEXIS 1756 (4th Cir. Jan. 21, 2020):

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WaPo: Saudi crown prince implicated in hack of Jeff Bezos’s phone, U.N. report will say

WaPo: Saudi crown prince implicated in hack of Jeff Bezos’s phone, U.N. report will say by Marc Fisher and Steven Zeitchik (“A United Nations investigation to be released Wednesday will report that Amazon founder Jeff Bezos’s cellphone was hacked in … Continue reading

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LA4: Lack of apt no. in SW wasn’t inspecific where officers were directed to his door

The search warrant for defendant’s apartment didn’t have the apartment number, but the warrant was specific and directed the officers to his door. That was constitutionally adequate. State v. Gilmartin, 2020 La. App. LEXIS 118 (La. App. 4 Cir. Jan. … Continue reading

Posted in Particularity, Pretext, Probable cause | Comments Off on LA4: Lack of apt no. in SW wasn’t inspecific where officers were directed to his door