VA: Stop of men on street matching BOLO for other officers to arrive in two minutes was reasonable

The first officer to encounter defendant was responding to a BOLO of suspects on the street related to a nearby home invasion. They were close enough to the description. He stopped them and held them about two minutes until other officers with more information arrived. The stop was with reasonable suspicion. Defendant was not searched, just detained by the first officer, and it was reasonable on the totality. Turay v. Commonwealth, 2023 Va. App. LEXIS 843 ( Dec. 19, 2023) (en banc).

Defendant’s cell phone number was linked to him through public databases. It was a reasonable inference that his CSLI could link him to robberies, so probable cause was shown. United States v. Li Wen Tang, 2023 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 225517 (D. Mass. Dec. 18, 2023).*

Defendant was arrested entering a casino with cocaine and he tried to flee. A motion to suppress was originally filed and withdrawn. Then another was filed and denied and not appealed. Now pro se in 2255 he asserts it again as an ineffective assistance claim. It was frivolous, so no IAC. United States v. Carey, 2023 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 224155 (M.D. Pa. Dec. 15, 2023).*

This entry was posted in Cell site location information, Ineffective assistance. Bookmark the permalink.

Comments are closed.