ID: Knock-and-talk on boat led to valid consent

An employee of a marina called the police to tell them that a boat had docked several times in the past week and people were coming and going like they were buying drugs from the boat. An officer went to the marina to conduct a knock-and-talk of the boat, and the officer obtained consent. When defendant opened the door of the boat, the officer could smell methamphetamine. State v. Linenberger, 151 Idaho 680, 263 P.3d 145 (2011)* [the case does not even mention that, comparing the cases of the smell of marijuana from a car, and the mobility of a boat, the automobile exception would have justified the search].

Defendant was involved in an accident, and the trial was over whether he was the driver and was intoxicated. When he was in the ER, blood was drawn for diagnosis, and the blood was admitted in evidence at the trial. The taking of the blood by the hospital was a private search, and the Fourth Amendment was not implicated. Commonwealth v. McGrail, 80 Mass. App. Ct. 339, 952 N.E.2d 969 (2011).*

The officer testified he stopped the defendant’s car because he couldn’t read the license plate because of snow and driving in the center of a road with snow on it and high snow banks and no marked centerline. Neither was a justification for the stop. City of Lakewood v. Shelton, 2011 Ohio 4408, 2011 Ohio App. LEXIS 3677 (8th Cir. September 1, 2011).*

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