GA: Car GPS reported to dealer, and officer got SW for the GPS data

Defendant’s car GPS snitched him off to the dealer where the officers got the ping information. “The Cobb detective also discovered that the Camry had a GPS system that pinged its location to the dealership, and she obtained a search warrant for the information, which was tendered to evidence. The GPS data corresponded with the locations of Dillon’s incident, the location where her purse was discovered, and the various locations of the transactions and attempted transactions.” Olushola v. State, 2024 Ga. App. LEXIS 418 (Oct. 23, 2024). (All is not lost by this. I persuaded a prosecutor that a rental car’s GPS would prove that my client, a passenger in the car, was picked up at the Pheonix airport after the drugs were put in the car in Los Angeles, and that supported he was unaware. They nolle prossed him.)

Officers preparing a search warrant for defendant’s house were also watching it from a “covert camera” to time the search to arrest their targets. State v. Ward, 2024-Ohio-5073 (1st Dist. Oct. 23, 2024).*

Officers had reasonable suspicion to stop defendant for the purpose of investigating his activities minutes later when he got out of his car. Both officers observed a transaction that contained indicia of an unlawful drug sale, which was more than a mere hunch that criminal activity had taken place. Statements by defendant and his girlfriend implying the presence of contraband in the apartment, corroborated the officers’ belief that evidence of crime would be located in the apartment, and that was sufficient to establish probable cause to search the apartment. State v. Keese, 2024-Ohio-5075 (1st Dist. Oct. 23, 2024).*

This entry was posted in GPS / Tracking Data, Pole cameras, Reasonable suspicion. Bookmark the permalink.

Comments are closed.