Daily Archives: September 27, 2021

LATimes: Greyhound settles lawsuit over immigration sweeps on buses

LATimes: Greyhound settles lawsuit over immigration sweeps on buses (“Greyhound Lines Inc. will pay $2.2 million to settle a lawsuit over the bus line’s practice of allowing U.S. Customs and Border Protection agents to board its buses in Washington state … Continue reading

Posted in Immigration checkpoints | Comments Off on LATimes: Greyhound settles lawsuit over immigration sweeps on buses

CT: SW for blood was independent source from extension of stop

The search warrant for defendant’s blood is a valid independent source from the alleged extension of the stop. State v. Fields, 2021 Conn. App. LEXIS 341 (Sept. 28, 2021).* The circumstances of this stop and arrest are objectively reasonable, so … Continue reading

Posted in Independent source, Pretext, Reasonable suspicion | Comments Off on CT: SW for blood was independent source from extension of stop

N.D.Tex.: Three day seizure of inmate’s legal papers was reasonable

Jail seizure of plaintiff’s legal papers for three days was not unreasonable. “Here, Plaintiff has not shown that the seizure of his personal property by jail officials—during a disturbance he created—violated his rights under the Fourth Amendment. And Plaintiff acknowledges … Continue reading

Posted in Excessive force, Prison and jail searches | Comments Off on N.D.Tex.: Three day seizure of inmate’s legal papers was reasonable

OH1: Exclusionary rule doesn’t apply in probation revo proceedings

The exclusionary rule does not apply to probation revocation proceedings. (Defendant relies on a 1983 case overruled in 1996.) State v. Richardson, 2021-Ohio-3362, 2021 Ohio App. LEXIS 3302 (1st Dist. Sept. 24, 2021). Defendant’s 2255 reasserts numerous claims, one of … Continue reading

Posted in Exclusionary rule, Plain view, feel, smell, Standards of review | Comments Off on OH1: Exclusionary rule doesn’t apply in probation revo proceedings

NV: Failure to complete inventory after finding gun in plain view was reasonable

The officer’s failure to complete the inventory after finding a gun in plain view and seizing it was reasonable under the circumstances. Jim v. State, 137 Nev. Adv. Op. 57, 2021 Nev. LEXIS 59 (Sept. 23, 2021):

Posted in Inventory, Plain view, feel, smell | Comments Off on NV: Failure to complete inventory after finding gun in plain view was reasonable

D.S.C.: SW affidavit remains under seal; redaction not yet practical

Government shows grounds to keep this search warrant affidavit under seal for up to a year or when the court should revisit it. Redaction is impractical. In the Matter of the Application of the United States of America for a … Continue reading

Posted in Warrant papers | Comments Off on D.S.C.: SW affidavit remains under seal; redaction not yet practical

The Intercept: Federal Prisons’ Switch To Scanning Mail Is A Surveillance Nightmare

The Intercept: Federal Prisons’ Switch To Scanning Mail Is A Surveillance Nightmare (“The Bureau of Prisons has piloted a program that can give authorities ‘huge secret intelligence into the public sender of postal mail.’”) Politico: Covert Postal Service unit probed … Continue reading

Posted in Mail and packages, Prison and jail searches, Social media warrants | Comments Off on The Intercept: Federal Prisons’ Switch To Scanning Mail Is A Surveillance Nightmare