Posted on August 11, 2014 in
Appellate courts in Massachusetts constantly grapple with the question of how much circumstantial evidence against an alleged drug dealer is enough to justify a search. The Supreme Judicial Court’s latest ruling arrived last week in Commonwealth v. Paul Stewart (SJC-11475, decided August 7, 2014). (more…)
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Posted on July 17, 2014 in
In Commonwealth v. Korey Jordan, the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court ruled this week that police officers exceeded their authority in stopping a rental car that had been involved in a shooting two days earlier. (more…)
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Posted on July 15, 2014 in
When police officers make an arrest, they are permitted to search the person being arrested along with his immediate surroundings. Such a procedure is called a “search incident to arrest.” In United States v. Robinson, the United States Supreme Court ruled that the police may search for weapons, contraband, or evidence of a crime. ...
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Posted on July 9, 2014 in
As a result of a 2008 ballot initiative, it is no longer a crime to possess less than one ounce of marijuana in Massachusetts. The change in the law also changed the rules related to a police officer’s right to search your motor vehicle. The Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court ruled today in Commonwealth v....
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Posted on June 23, 2014 in
On June 18, 2014, the Supreme Judicial Court clarified the scope of the “one-party consent exception” to the state wiretap law (chapter 272, section 99). In Massachusetts it is illegal to secretly record an oral communication unless all parties to the conversation consent. However, the one-party consent exception allows a law enforcement officer, or...
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