Daily Archives: February 18, 2020

CA6: FRCP 60(b) can’t be used to backdoor a successor habeas

Habeas petitioner’s attempt to use Rule 60(b) to attack the rejection of a Fourth Amendment claim was a backdoor successor habeas that doesn’t satisfy grounds for one. In re Henderson, 2020 U.S. App. LEXIS 4856 (6th Cir. Feb. 14, 2020)*:

Posted in Abstention, Ineffective assistance | Comments Off on CA6: FRCP 60(b) can’t be used to backdoor a successor habeas

NPR.org: Warrant-Proof Encrypted Messages Targeted By Trump Administration

NPR.org: Warrant-Proof Encrypted Messages Targeted By Trump Administration (“‘End-to-end encryption’ has gone mainstream, which means tech companies can’t decrypt messages even when law enforcement has a warrant. The Trump administration says that’s taking privacy too far.”)

Posted in Cell phones, Computer and cloud searches, Privileges | Comments Off on NPR.org: Warrant-Proof Encrypted Messages Targeted By Trump Administration

WaPo: Ring and Nest helped normalize American surveillance and turned us into a nation of voyeurs

WaPo: Ring and Nest helped normalize American surveillance and turned us into a nation of voyeurs by Drew Harwell (“For all the worries about hacking, owners of Internet-connected cameras say they love watching people silently from afar — often their … Continue reading

Posted in Surveillance technology | Comments Off on WaPo: Ring and Nest helped normalize American surveillance and turned us into a nation of voyeurs

IN: Having def manipulate his clothing and remove his shoes was a search, not a safety frisk for weapons

The search of defendant was not for officer safety where the officer told defendant to move his clothing around because, if he was armed, he would be putting his hands on the weapon. The order to remove his shoes also … Continue reading

Posted in Reasonableness, Stop and frisk | Comments Off on IN: Having def manipulate his clothing and remove his shoes was a search, not a safety frisk for weapons