IN: The fact a drug dog could alert to hemp doesn’t mean an alert isn’t PC

The fact a drug dog can alert to hemp as well as marijuana doesn’t make the dog alert violate the Fourth Amendment. Akins v. State, 2026 Ind. App. LEXIS 39 (Feb. 6, 2026):

In sum, the fact that legal hemp shares characteristics with illegal marijuana does not categorically disable law enforcement from relying on trained canine alerts that could indicate either substance. Akins’s proposed rule, under which probable cause disappears whenever lawful and unlawful explanations are plausible, finds no support in Fourth Amendment jurisprudence. Rasse’s alert, considered alongside Officer Bradford’s independent knowledge of the surrounding circumstances, supported a fair probability that contraband would be found in Akins’s car. Akins therefore fails to demonstrate a violation of the Fourth Amendment.

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