AR: Def didn’t show standing in rental car rented by woman he said was his girlfriend

Defendant was driving a rental car in his girlfriend’s name, but he made no effort to show standing in the car. He didn’t rent it, and he wasn’t an authorized driver on the agreement, which said no other drivers were permitted. The car was tracked with GPS planted by Missouri police before Jones, but he was stopped for speeding in Arkansas when they were expecting him. He had no standing, so neither Jones nor his effort to distinguish Davis good faith needs to be decided. He consented after the stop. Wilson v. State, 2014 Ark. 8, 2014 Ark. LEXIS 31 (January 16, 2014).

The officer conducting a traffic stop of the defendant knew that he was under investigation by the DEA. The stop was at night in a high crime area. Defendant was subjected to a cursory patdown for weapons that revealed none, and there was no manipulation of his pockets. He validly consented to a search of his car. United States v. Asghedom, 2013 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 183686 (N.D. Ala. October 21, 2013).*

Then it was revealed there was a GPS device on defendant’s car, and the stop was in 2010. All this was way prior to Jones, and it is settled in this circuit that pre-Jones GPS tracking is subject to the good faith exception under Davis. United States v. Asghedom, 2013 U.S. U.S. Dist. LEXIS 183683 (N.D. Ala. December 31, 2013).*

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