Daily Archives: March 12, 2021

E.D.Pa.: Just because defense counsel finds an omitted fact interesting doesn’t make it “material”; not all facts need be included

The 121 page affidavit for search warrant for evidence of drug trafficking was neither stale nor lacked nexus. Defendant’s Franks challenge also fails for lack of a substantial preliminary showing. United States v. Briggs, 2021 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 44653 (E.D. … Continue reading

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CA11: Encounter was consensual; race of occupants of car never a valid concern

The court finds that the police-citizen encounter here was consensual, so the question of reasonable suspicion doesn’t have to be decided. The race of the occupants is never a concern in consent. United States v. Knights, 2021 U.S. App. LEXIS … Continue reading

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CA11: Immediate response to gunshot report justified warrantless entry

Nearby officers heard a gunshot and they arrived to locate the cause and source. “[T]the emergency doctrine justified the warrantless search. The officers had an objectively reasonable basis to believe that there was an immediate need to protect themselves and … Continue reading

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CA9: DV victim, def’s wife, consented to search for firearms

Defendant’s wife called the police as a domestic violence victim, and she was found to have consented to a search of their garage and gun safe. She was emotional, considering what she’d been through, but consent wasn’t involuntary. She was … Continue reading

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D.Conn.: Stripped down and strapped to bed in prison states 4A claim

In PLRA screening over a jail strip search and leaving plaintiff naked strapped down to his bed, “[t]he Court cannot discern a legitimate justification for leaving Smith in four-point restraints without a gown or a blanket to cover his naked … Continue reading

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CA11: Tasing grand mal seizure sufferer held down by four men was excessive on its face; no QI

The officer’s repeated Tasings of the teenager who was suffering a grand mal seizure amounted to excessive force. The district court properly denied qualified immunity, because the constitutional violation was clearly established based on both materially similar case law and … Continue reading

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D.Me.: Even a perjury claim about state court search testimony doesn’t get over Stone bar

2254 petitioner’s claim that the search and seizure testimony in state court was based on perjury still doesn’t get him over Stone v. Powell. Wilson v. Maine, 2021 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 44260 (D. Me. Mar. 10, 2021). A § 1983 … Continue reading

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