NC: Smell of dead animal led police to exigency of finding dogs in distress

The officer responded to a neighbor’s call that there was the smell of a dead animal coming from defendant’s property. The officer walked up the driveway and could see chained obviously sickly dogs with no food or water. The smell was overpowering and made the officer feel sick. This was exigency of animals in distress. State v. Johnson, 2024 N.C. App. LEXIS 1002 (Dec. 17, 2024).

Only a hunch: “Stated otherwise, while the testifying [BLM] Rangers offered ‘articulable’ facts in support of their hunch that criminal activity was afoot, they provide little basis for how these factors were ‘suspicious’ individually or in the aggregate in the context of the other facts and circumstances at the scene addressed above.” United States v. Holliway, 2024 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 229807 (E.D. Cal. Dec. 19, 2024).*

Defendant doesn’t argue scope of search incident to arrest, only that there was no probable cause for the arrest, and there was. State v. Eckert, 2024 Iowa App. LEXIS 937 (Dec. 18, 2024).*

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