Law Enforcement Digests Flashcards

1
Q

Are no-knock allowed under the WA constitution?

A

No, even on a compromised approach

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2
Q

Do offices have to physically knock before entering on a warrant?

A

No, if there are exigent circumstances and police presence was likely known. In this case, suspect saw officers outside ready to enter on the warrant and ran into the house. The police announced on a loud spekaer that they had a warrant. This satisified the knock and announce requirement because of the exigent circumstances.

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3
Q

How much time must officers give after announcing on a warrant before they can enter?

A

A reasonable amount of time which is dependent on the court based on the circumstances.

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4
Q

What does a court use to evaluate the reasonableness of a waiting period before entering on a warrant?

A
  1. Reduction of violence to both occupants and police arising from an unannounced entry.
  2. Prevention of unnecessary property damage.
  3. Protection of an occupants right to privacy.
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5
Q

What do officers need to announce to the occupents of a house before entering on a warrant?

A
  1. Inform occupents of their (police) presence,
  2. their identity
  3. their purpose for being there
  4. Demand admittance
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6
Q

How does the court evaluate “staleness” of a warrant?

A

Totality of the circumstances, including amount of time between warrant’s issuance, nature and scope of the suspected criminal activity, and property to be seized.

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7
Q

What does CR rule 2.3 state about how long a search warrant is valid for?

A

10 days

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8
Q

When is a statement “non-testimonial”?

A

When made during a police investigation under circumstances indicating that the primary purpose of the interrogation is to stop an ongoing emergency.

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9
Q

When is a statement “testimonial?”

A

When there is not an ongoing emergency and the purpose of the investigation is to determine past events.

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10
Q

What is the “confrontation clause” of the Constitution?

A

Bars admission of testimonial statements of a witness who does not appear at trial.

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11
Q

In State V Ellis, why were the victim’s statements to police thrown out?

A

Because she did not appear at trial and her statements were testomonial.

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12
Q

Can the police review digital evidence handed to them by a private party?

A

Yes. The police did not search for the evidence, it was handed to them.

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13
Q

What does WA Constitution, Article 1 Sectoin 7 state?

A

No person shall be disturbed in his private affairs, or his home invaded, without authority of law.

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14
Q

Under WA constitution, who has the burden to prove that his “private affairs” were disturbed?

A

The defendant

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15
Q

When is a frisk allowed?

A
  1. An officer can point to specific and articulable facts,
  2. that create an objectively reasonable belief that the suspect,
  3. is armed and presently dangerous.

Failure of any of the three above make the frisk unlawful.

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16
Q

When does a protective frisk not violate a defendan’ts rights?

A
  1. The initial stop is legitimate
  2. A reasonable safety concern exists to justify the frisk
  3. The scope of the frisk is limited to the protective purpose
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17
Q

In State V Charles, officers responded to Starbucks for a sleeper. The officer saw a the tip of a metal utensal in the suspects pocket and pulled it out, finding drug residue on it. Was this a lawful frisk?

A

No. The officer did not do a frisk. He conducted an illegal search by removing the item from the pocket. He should have felt the outside of the pocket first.

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18
Q

What is the “3-prong emergency aid test” for warrantless searches in a community-caretaking role?

A
  1. Officer subjectivly believed that an emergency existed required immediate aid, and
  2. a reasonable person in the same situation would also believe aid was needed, and
  3. there was a reasonable basis to associate the need for assistance with the place searched.
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19
Q

What is the court’s defintion of “private affairs?”

A

Privacy interests that citizen of this state have held, and should be entitled to hold, safe from government trespass without a warrant.

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20
Q

Do individuals have a privacy interest in text converstations with known contacts?

A

Yes

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21
Q

When can consent provide “authority of law” for a search?

A
  1. Consent was voluntary
  2. The person giving consent had authority to do so
  3. The search did not exceed the scope of the consent
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22
Q

In State V York, where the officer conducted a Terry stop on a vehicle parked the wrong way, engine and lights, and when officers arrive a male exited a parked car and tried to get into the running vehicle, was the Terry Stop valid?

A

Yes. Totality of the circumstances known to the officer at the time of the stop were reasonable for the Terry. The officers training and experience and knowledge of the area both come into play.

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23
Q

What are the two fundamental principles for a seach warrant?

A
  1. Warrant must be supported by probable cause (fair probablity that evidence will be found),
  2. the warrant must not be overbroad.
24
Q

In State V King, officers applied for a warrant to seize both the gun used in the crime and all other firearms in the residence. Was this overbroad?

A

No. King was a felon thus had no privacy interest in any other firearms in the residence. All firearms in his possession are evidence of a crime.

25
Q

In State V Mora, Mora was outside a mall talking to police and the police took his seven year old son inside the mall to stay warm For Miranda purposes, was Mora free to leave or was he in custody?

A

He was in custody as he was seperated from his child, thus he was not free to leave.

26
Q

What are the Kim Factors in determing if a person is free to walk away from police?

A
  1. Language used to summon the individual
  2. extent to which defended is confronted with evidence of guilt
  3. physical surroundings of the interrogation
  4. durationof the detention
  5. degree of pressure applied to detain the individual.

A reasonable person would not feel free to leave if their child is with police out of view.

27
Q

Do police officers executing a warrant owe the same duty of reasonable care that they owe when discharging other duties.

A

Yes. In Mancini v Tacoma, police did not exercise reasonable care when they did not take any steps to validate CI’s information about which apartment the drug dealer lives.

28
Q

Who bears the burden of showing a warrantless
seizure fell under an exception to the warrant requirement?

A

The state. Warrantless searches are presumed to be unreasonable unless shown otherwise.

29
Q

Is a Terry Stop an exception to the warrant requirement?

A

yes. It is a seizure but limited in scope.

30
Q

Is an informants tip sufficient to satisfy reasonable suspicions to make a terry stop?

A

Not automatically. The informant must be shown to be reliable.

31
Q

Does contraband have a privacy interest?

A

No. Illegal items do not have a privacy interest.

32
Q

What is a “Section 1983” claim?

A

The avenue through which a citizen can file a civil lawsuit in federal court against government actors (such as police officers) individually for violation of a citizen’s federal rights.

33
Q

What is qualified immunity?

A

An affirmative action defense stating that officers were not violating “clearly established” rights.

34
Q

What is a “summary judgement?”

A

When the court grants judgment in favor of the party without the need for a trial on the grounds that no genuine issues of
material fact exist for a trier of fact (judge or jury} to consider or weigh and, therefore, the party ls entitled to judgment as a matter of law.

35
Q

What are the two prongs of a qualified immunity test?

A

(1) Did officers violate a federal constitutional right, and
(2) the unlawfulness of their conduct was clearly established at the time.

36
Q

Is the statement “Can I have an attorney?” an unequivocal request?

A

yes. Even though it is phrased in a form of a question, it is an unequivocal request for an attorney.

37
Q

What is an informant’s reliability based on?

A

Credibility and basis of knowledge.

38
Q

Does the 4th amendment always allow a warrantless entry into a home when pursuing a fleeing misdemeanor suspect?

A

No. The warrantless entry will be case-specific.

39
Q

When may an warrantless entry of a residence be made when pursing a suspect?

A
  1. Prevent imminent injury
  2. Prevent destruction of evidence
  3. Prevent suspect’s escape.
40
Q

When is a private citizen acting as a government agent?

A

When the State encouraged, directed or controlled the conduct of the private person.

41
Q

What is “injunctive relief?”

A

When a party asks a court to prohibit another party from acting, or order a party to act.

42
Q

What are the four factors of a privacy act violation?

A
  1. A private communication transmitted by a device, which was
  2. intercepted or recorded
  3. by a device designed to record
  4. without the consent of all parties involved.
43
Q

What constitutional right does Gordon v County of Orange establish regarding detainee checks?

A

That a detainee has a right to direct-view safety checks sufficient to determine whether their presentation indicates the need for medical treatment.

44
Q

What is required between a search warrant and the items listed in the warrant to be seized?

A

A nexus between the item and the crime. In State v Denham, the officers received a warrant for phone records for a jewelry theft. They had a nexus between the phone records and a burlgary.

45
Q

Does burglary require that the suspect know he was entering or staying unlawfully?

A

No. Knowledge is not a requirement.

46
Q

In terms of vehicles, does the Homestead Act apply?

A

Yes, if the person is living out of their vehicle. They do not have to declare their vehicle a home. The act protects the vehicle up to $15,000.

47
Q

When is the Homestead Act resolved?

A

Upon enforcement in court, not at the time of the ticket issuance.

48
Q

What is an injuntion?

A

It is a court order restraining a party from contiuing an action that threatens or invades a legal right of another. In Gracia vs LA, the court injuction stopped the city from using an ordinance that allowed the city to throw away people’s bulky items.

49
Q

When is an injunction issued?

A

When the requesting party can demonstrate that they will likely prevail at trial.

50
Q

What is a premilinary injunction?

A

An injunction sought as part of a pending lawsuit.

51
Q

Is “enters or remains unlawfully” an essential element in Burglary?

A

yes. It is an “express” essential element as it is expressly written in the statute (rather than being implied.)

52
Q

What is a “good cause order?”

A

An order whose only purpose is to authorize a disclosure of patient information that would otherwise be prohibited. It must be sought before the warrant is sought.

53
Q

What are the two prongs for a Good Cause order?

A
  1. Other ways of obtaining the information are not available, and
  2. The public interest and need for the disclosure outweighs the potential injury to the patient.
54
Q

Does the Trafficking statute require proof that any sexual act actually occured?

A

No.

55
Q

Can animal cruelty be a crime of domestic violence?

A

Yes

56
Q

Does the open view and plain view doctrine allow police to conduct a warrantless seizure if it is “immedialty apparent” that the object seized “is associated with a crime?”

A

Yes