Daily Archives: June 19, 2020

OH2: Furtive movement during knock-and-talk justified entry

Officers entered an apartment building with the consent of one of the tenants when they were investigating a threat with a firearm by one of the tenants. Their knock-and-talk at defendant’s door was reasonable, as was ordering him to open … Continue reading

Posted in Drug or alcohol testing, Emergency / exigency, Ineffective assistance, Knock and talk, Reasonable suspicion | Comments Off on OH2: Furtive movement during knock-and-talk justified entry

RI: Reasonable use of force to take inmate’s DNA under SW wasn’t grounds for suppression

The trial court erred in granting defendant’s motion to suppress the taking of his DNA by force under a search warrant when he refused to cooperate. He already had a reduced expectation of privacy in the jail, and the state’s … Continue reading

Posted in DNA, Excessive force, Ineffective assistance, Warrant execution | Comments Off on RI: Reasonable use of force to take inmate’s DNA under SW wasn’t grounds for suppression

NYTimes: Council Forces N.Y.P.D. to Disclose Use of Drones and Other Spy Tech

NYTimes: Council Forces N.Y.P.D. to Disclose Use of Drones and Other Spy Tech by Alan Feuer (“The bill, which the mayor is likely to sign, compels the police to disclose the technology they use and data they collect.”)

Posted in Drones, Surveillance technology | Comments Off on NYTimes: Council Forces N.Y.P.D. to Disclose Use of Drones and Other Spy Tech

CA6: QI denied officers who Tased a man for not getting out of his car fast enough; he had recent surgery and a colostomy bag

Plaintiff was Tased when he slowly got out of a car after officers flashed badges on him. He was recovering from surgery and had a colostomy bag and staples in his stomach. While the use of force does not require … Continue reading

Posted in Excessive force, Qualified immunity | Comments Off on CA6: QI denied officers who Tased a man for not getting out of his car fast enough; he had recent surgery and a colostomy bag

CNN: Air Force inspector general investigating use of military aircraft to monitor protesters

CNN: Air Force inspector general investigating use of military aircraft to monitor protesters by Barbara Starr and Caroline Kelly:

Posted in Surveillance technology | Comments Off on CNN: Air Force inspector general investigating use of military aircraft to monitor protesters

OR: Fleeing police, wrecking car, and bailing out and running away was abandonment

Defendant fled from the police and wrecked his car and nearly totaled it, leaving it where it wrecked and running away. He sought to distinguish a state case from 1980 that predated Oregon’s expansion under the state constitution, but the … Continue reading

Posted in Abandonment | Comments Off on OR: Fleeing police, wrecking car, and bailing out and running away was abandonment

OR: Apparent authority to consent to search of contents of car here limited to his own stuff

There were two people in a van and a consent search was sought; the police needed to make sure that one didn’t consent to search of property under control of the other. “As a matter of law, actual authority over … Continue reading

Posted in Apparent authority, Scope of search | Comments Off on OR: Apparent authority to consent to search of contents of car here limited to his own stuff

D.Mass.: BitTorrent software still subject to third-party doctrine despite its technical sophistication

Defendant claims that BitTorrent downloading is so sophisticated that the third-party doctrine of Smith and Miller should not apply. The court takes the argument seriously but rejects it. Carpenter doesn’t undermine the third-party doctrine, and the motion to suppress is … Continue reading

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D.Mont.: Drug dog’s reliability doesn’t need to be shown in SW application

A search warrant application does not have to support the reliability of a drug dog used to establish the probable cause under Harris. The remedy is a motion to suppress. “As this Court reads it, Harris is a reiteration of … Continue reading

Posted in Dog sniff, Franks doctrine, Probable cause | Comments Off on D.Mont.: Drug dog’s reliability doesn’t need to be shown in SW application