…an officer in good faith that later turns out to be false also is not a violation of G.S. 14-223, which requires willful resistance, delay or obstruction. Moreover, every person…
…forfeitures and of all fines collected in the several counties for any breach of the penal laws of the State” to be “faithfully appropriated and used exclusively for maintaining free…
…not demonstrate bad faith loss or destruction of any evidence by the government. The defendant’s claim that his conviction was tainted by the knowing use of perjured testimony likewise failed….
…was at least as intrusive as the CSLI at issue in Carpenter, but determined that the good faith exception applied because prior precedent had said that the use of pole…
…it his own, exclusively, and thereby deprive Sally of her interest in it, or (2) destroy it in bad faith, several courts have sustained criminal charges. See, e.g., People v….
…defendant’s notice was inadequate, the sanction imposed by the trial judge was too severe: there was no evidence of bad faith by the defendant, the State did not press for…
…of the dissenters, “any faithful application of Bracker to other Tribes in other States should only confirm the soundness of the traditional rule that state authorities may not try crimes…
…he could have believed in good faith that a PJC was not a conviction. (3) The Court observed that although a PJC with a condition that the defendant pay costs…
…Status Report and Motion to Stay at 1. The filing reported that since November the parties have worked diligently and in good faith on an interim agreement to obviate the…
…and my sense is that often none will — a prosecutor attempting to “save” evidence might argue that the officer who conducted the search acted in good faith and thus…