Daily Archives: May 20, 2024

CA5: CBP dog sniffing for people was PC even if it couldn’t differentiate between the driver and alleged hidden passengers

A CBP dog trained to sniff for people provided reasonable suspicion even against the argument of how the dog could differentiate between the truck driver and hidden passengers. United States v. Martinez, 2024 U.S. App. LEXIS 12043 (5th Cir. May … Continue reading

Posted in Dog sniff, Probable cause, Rule 41(g) / Return of property | Comments Off on CA5: CBP dog sniffing for people was PC even if it couldn’t differentiate between the driver and alleged hidden passengers

D.D.C.: Here, RS was thin, and frisking under jacket was unreasonable

The reasonable suspicion here is thin at best, but, even if there was enough for a stop, there wasn’t for a frisk. Going under defendant’s “jacket to feel his waist and groin area” was unreasonable because there wasn’t suspicion he … Continue reading

Posted in Stop and frisk | Comments Off on D.D.C.: Here, RS was thin, and frisking under jacket was unreasonable

NE: LEO’s statutory jurisdictional authority is not an unreasonable search and seizure question

A law enforcement officer’s statutory power and authority to enforce laws outside of the officer’s primary jurisdiction does not implicate the Fourth Amendment or article I, § 7, of the Nebraska Constitution. State v. Hoehn, 316 Neb. 634 (May 17, … Continue reading

Posted in Administrative search, Arrest or entry on arrest, Exclusionary rule, Qualified immunity, Subpoenas / Nat'l Security Letters | Comments Off on NE: LEO’s statutory jurisdictional authority is not an unreasonable search and seizure question