…several free resources and is a useful overview of some services that we provide but that may not be widely known.] As today marks the opening day of the 150th…
…and that neither plain-view or Leon good-faith applied. “By failing to persist in our historical commitment to the particularity requirement in this context, I believe that the majority further opens…
…distancing, capacity, and mass gathering restrictions by June 1. Courthouse personnel, charged with ensuring that courts remain open and that justice is administered without delay, were designated as frontline essential…
…other things, had a pediatrician examine the girl. The doctor found several vaginal abnormalities suggestive of abuse, but found that the girl’s anal opening was normal. At trial, the prosecutor…
…opened the defendant’s cell phone and reviewed the call log. They noted a phone number in the call log was listed as “my house,” and used an online directory to…
…object” into another’s genital or anal opening. Id. The Green Court began by noting that the issue was one of first impression in North Carolina. It added however that decisions…
…and gave officers no further justification to search the rest of the house or to open safes. This argument was squarely rejected. The odor of marijuana provides probable cause to…
…seems to be pretty close to what Fridley says. But I’m open to persuasion, so let me know if you’re aware of additional authority or think I’ve got it wrong….
…defendant entered a women’s restroom and opened a toilet stall being used by a female). But North Carolina’s disorderly conduct statute, G.S. 14-288.4, is limited to specific types of disruptive…
…United States Supreme Court in Fernandez v. California (2014), clarified an issue left open in Georgia v. Randolph: the validity of a consent search by a residential occupant after a…