OH5: GFE exception still applies even though court said 3 years earlier they couldn’t do what they did

A probate judge is not a judge authorized to issue a search warrant in Ohio, but the good faith exception still applies to a 2012 warrant, even though a 2009 case says that it couldn’t be done. The court notes that no record was made on good faith. So it must apply. State v. Kithcart, 2013 Ohio 3022, 2013 Ohio App. LEXIS 3065 (5th Dist. July 10, 2013).* [Read this case and see if it makes any sense whatsoever. The state carries the burden on good faith and it failed. Obviously, we have here three judges utterly clueless about the Fourth Amendment and the good faith exception. Hopefully counsel will take this up or ask for rehearing and resist the urge to refer to them as “completely Fourth Amendment- impaired.”]

Defendant’s stop was based on reasonable suspicion for a weight bench that was moving around as the vehicle was moving (unsecured load). It did not have to fall out of the truck to qualify. State v. Heard, 2013 Ohio 3037, 2013 Ohio App. LEXIS 3089 (2d Dist. July 12, 2013).*

Defendant and his car were linked to marijuana transportation, and the search of the car was valid under the automobile exception. Gant does not apply. Ross v. State, 323 Ga. App. 28, 747 S.E.2d 81 (2013).*

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