Monthly Archives: October 2024

The Conversation: Police stop more Black drivers, while speed cameras issue unbiased tickets − new study from Chicago

The Conversation: Police stop more Black drivers, while speed cameras issue unbiased tickets − new study from Chicago by Wenfei Xu, David Levinson, Michael J Smart & Nebiyou Yonas Tilahun:

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W.D.Ky.: In a criminal trial against a police office for excessive force during a raid, is 404(b) evidence of other bad searches admissible?

Defendant is a police officer charged with deprivation of rights from firing a gun into a window with blinds drawn during execution of a search warrant. This is about his mistaken belief that an AR-15 was firing from inside, and … Continue reading

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CA2: A wrecked vehicle that has to be towed away is mobile for the automobile exception

Defendant wrecked his rental car and it was undriveable. It was still subject to the automobile exception because it would almost certainly be towed away, and that’s mobility. United States v. Jones, 2024 U.S. App. LEXIS 25563 (2d Cir. Oct. … Continue reading

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D.Md.: Waiting for backup doesn’t unreasonably extend a stop under Rodriguez

Waiting for backup is for legitimate safety concerns and does not unreasonably extend a stop under Rodriguez. United States v. Bagayoko, 2024 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 185066 (D. Md. Oct. 9, 2024):

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OH: Even when the driver isn’t the owner with a suspended DL, it’s not unreasonable to ask for his DL

The stop was because the vehicle owner had an expired DL. When the officer discovers the driver is not the owner, the officer does not act unreasonably in asking for the driver’s DL. State v. Dunlap, 2024-Ohio-4821, 2024 Ohio LEXIS … Continue reading

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E.D.Pa.: SW papers remain sealed because the investigation isn’t complete

The government opposes the unsealing of the search warrant papers in this case because the investigation is still ongoing. The first motion was denied about a year ago. On renewal of the motion, the court finds the investigation still ongoing, … Continue reading

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FL1: Def’s refusal to admit computer searched was his denies him standing

At the suppression hearing, defendant refused to claim ownership of the computer the subject of the motion to suppress. Therefore, he has no standing. Alternatively, the good faith exception saves the search even if there was no probable cause. Bates … Continue reading

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D.P.R.: Officer’s construction of traffic law was “ardous” and unreasonable under Heien

The officer’s conclusion defendant violated a U-turn statute was unreasonable, and the motion to suppress is granted. “While mistakes of law based on arduous questions of statutory interpretation may justify an officer’s judgment, a poor study of the law cannot … Continue reading

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FL5: Weaving justified welfare check stop

Defendant’s obvious weaving justified at least a welfare check stop that was reasonable. State v. Sheldon, 2024 Fla. App. LEXIS 7892 (Fla. 5th DCA Oct. 8, 2024). 2254 petitioner doesn’t show that he didn’t get a full and fair opportunity … Continue reading

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E.D.Okla.: Housing authority’s warning of a pest inspection permitted under lease agreement amounts to no REP

The housing authority told plaintiff they were coming in for a pest inspection and did under the conditions of the lease. That was reasonable, and there was no violation of a reasonable expectation of privacy when the inspectors saw drugs. … Continue reading

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IN: Warrantless pulling on a loose car door panel was with PC and reasonable

The officer’s warrantless pulling on a loose car door panel with probable cause was not an unreasonable search under the Fourth Amendment or state constitution. Young v. State, 2024 Ind. App. LEXIS 279 (Oct. 4, 2024). The arrival of drug … Continue reading

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E.D.N.Y.: RS required for non-routine customs cell phone search

An Italian businessman with business in Luxembourg and investment in the United States had his cell phone seized without reasonable suspicion at JFK and searched elsewhere. Reasonable suspicion is required for a non-routine cell phone search, and the data taken … Continue reading

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Law360: Open Questions In Unsettled Geofence Warrant Landscape

Law360: Open Questions In Unsettled Geofence Warrant Landscape by Charles Fowler (“This summer produced the first two federal appellate decisions on the Fourth Amendment implications of geofence warrants…. Neither decision is final. And the dust may well settle somewhere in … Continue reading

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S.D.W.Va.: Reasonable during a traffic stop to ask about firearms in the car

The traffic stop was reasonable, and it was also reasonable for the officer to just ask whether there was a gun in the car for safety reasons because carrying in legal in this state. United States v. Martin, 2024 U.S. … Continue reading

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AgWeb: Feds Claim Access to 1.2 Billion Private Acres Without Warrant or Probable Cause

AgWeb: Feds Claim Access to 1.2 Billion Private Acres Without Warrant or Probable Cause by Chris Bennett (“The federal government asserts power over at least 96% of all private land in the U.S.” “How much private land can the federal … Continue reading

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OH2: Arrest clothes in jail storage can be searched without a warrant

Under established authority from 1993 in this court, defendant’s clothes from his arrest in storage at the jail can be tested for evidence without a warrant. State v. Wells, 2024-Ohio-4813 (2d Dist. Oct. 4, 2024). Defendant pled guilty and only … Continue reading

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IA: A brief detention at the scene is not “arrest” for speedy trial purposes

“Arrest” for speedy trial purposes doesn’t include a brief detention at the scene before the actual arrest. State v. Harris, 2024 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 79 (Oct. 4, 2024). Defendant satisfied his first Franks burden of a substantial preliminary showing of … Continue reading

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UT: NCMEC didn’t look at the CP this time, but it had this case, and that’s enough

The fact the hash value of defendant’s material was known to be child pornography, it didn’t matter that NCMEC didn’t view the material before passing it on to the police who did. There was a prior private search. State v. … Continue reading

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Law Review: The Automated Fourth Amendment

Maneka Sinha, The Automated Fourth Amendment, 73 Emory L. J. 589 (2024). The abstract:

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S.D.Ohio: SW for def’s address produced documents related to another address of his which were lawfully seized

“[T]he Court agrees with Moore that papers listing the 3151 Gobel address that were taken from the 3100 Vienna Woods address fall outside the scope of the search warrant’s plain language. … But that does not end the inquiry as … Continue reading

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