TN: No 4A requirement to prove validity of NCIC car theft report after a stop

Defendant’s stop in Georgia for a traffic offense was reasonable because the car came back stolen. There is no constitutional reason for requiring the state prove that the person reporting the car theft was a “citizen informant.” She was connected to a murder in Tennessee. State v. Norwood, 2013 Tenn. Crim. App. LEXIS 990 (November 15, 2013).

The officer had reasonable suspicion for detaining defendant who was parked the wrong way in a rest area and seemed a little hyped up. The 20 minute wait for a drug dog was not unreasonable. State v. Rice, 2013-Ohio-5056, 2013 Ohio App. LEXIS 5241 (2d Dist. November 15, 2013).*

If there was a factual basis for ordering defendant out of the vehicle to continue the stop, the fact the officer mentioned one that turned out to be untrue doesn’t void the stop. Any basis is sufficient. State v. Sarno, 2013-Ohio-5058, 2013 Ohio App. LEXIS 5246 (2d Dist. November 15, 2013).*

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