UT: Citizen-informant entitled to more reliability

Police received a telephone call from a citizen informant, with a higher indicia of reliability, that three people were sitting in a green car behind her residence smoking drugs. When officers arrived, they found the described car and could smell burning crack cocaine, although nothing was visible. The stop was reasonable, and the smell was probable cause for a search, but not arrest at that first moment. State v. Lloyd, 2011 UT App 323, 263 P.3d 557 (2011).*

Defendant lacked any standing in the house searched because he was a casual visitor at best; no key, no clothes there. He never pled or attempted to show standing. Besides, the owner’s teenage children consented. Ordway v. Commonwealth, 352 S.W.3d 584 (Ky. 2011).*

The stop of defendant’s rental car was reasonably extended because neither the driver nor passenger was listed on the rental agreement, and the car was not supposed to be outside of North Carolina. There was nothing in the passenger compartment associated with travel and it had an air freshener. Morgan v. State, 311 Ga. App. 740 (September 21, 2011).*

The search of defendant’s car after he was arrested for driving to meet a fictitious teenager for sex was justified as an inventory search. The court of appeals holding that it was justified as a search incident when he was arrested 75′ away from it is vacated. Fuson v. State, 2011 Ark. 374, 383 S.W.3d 848 (2011).* [Disclaimer: This was on a petition for review from the Court of Appeals (noted here) which held that the search of the car was valid as a search incident, ignoring the fact defendant was handcuffed face down 75′ from the car at the time of search. I wrote the petition for review for defense counsel to seek to extinguish that holding, which we were at least successful at. In any event, there was a fairly compelling harmless error argument that could have been made since the search only provided corroboration of something else. Inventory was a valid alternative ground, but search incident was laughable.]

This entry was posted in Uncategorized. Bookmark the permalink.

Comments are closed.