Pretextual delay in booking for narcs to arrive voided search

Delay in booking time on a shoplifting was shown to be pretextual for narcs. State v. Perez, 141 P.3d 1039 (Haw. August 28, 2006):

Here, the prosecution does not challenge the circuit court’s finding that normal processing time for shoplifting arrests runs from one to two hours, but is one hour if things are running smoothly. It is also undisputed that Perez’s detention ran into a second hour not because things were not running smoothly, but because his processing had ceased while waiting for the narcotics detectives. Accordingly, given that the second hour of Perez’s detention was concededly pretextual, it cannot be justified under Vance and Langley.

No IAC where it was obvious that any motion to suppress would have failed. Branch v. State, 2006 Fla. LEXIS 1825 (August 31, 2006).*

Defendant was found slumped behind the wheel of his car, and it was no violation of defendant’s rights to run the tags and the driver’s information derived therefrom which found a warrant out for the defendant that led to his arrest. State v. Kelley, 934 So. 2d 51 (La. July 10, 2006).*

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