Daily Archives: January 14, 2022

E.D.Okla.: Motion to suppress waived when defense needed the evidence at trial

Defendant originally moved to suppress a search which included a video. Then he decided he needed it at trial, so it was waived. United States v. Savage, 2021 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 250209 (E.D.Okla. Nov. 19, 2021) (see Treatise § 60.19, … Continue reading

Posted in Waiver, Warrant papers | Comments Off on E.D.Okla.: Motion to suppress waived when defense needed the evidence at trial

C.D.Cal.: Admin SDT is not a 4A seizure

The Secretary of Labor’s administrative subpoena duces tecum here did not violate the Fourth Amendment. “A warrant is required only when government officials enter onto a private party’s premises without consent and forcibly take possession of documents.” Walsh v. Int’l … Continue reading

Posted in Computer and cloud searches, Reasonable suspicion, Seizure, Subpoenas / Nat'l Security Letters | Comments Off on C.D.Cal.: Admin SDT is not a 4A seizure

S.D.Tex.: No 5A protection on phone pass code, and inevitable discovery applies

The foregone conclusion rationale for access to passcodes for cell phones. There was no Fifth Amendment privilege to providing the passcodes. Inevitable discovery applies. United States v. Zhengdong Cheng, 2022 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6437 (S.D.Tex. Jan. 12, 2022):

Posted in Cell phones, Inevitable discovery, Privileges | Comments Off on S.D.Tex.: No 5A protection on phone pass code, and inevitable discovery applies