Tax the toke?

California to Vote on Legalizing Pot

In November, California will vote on whether to legalize marijuana,
thanks to a voter ballot initiative that passed inspection by state
election officials on Wednesday. If passed, the initiative would
legalize possession of up to an ounce of marijuana by people over age 21
and allow people to grow small amounts of marijuana at home for personal
use. Cities and counties would gain the right to pass laws allowing
commercial distribution to adults 21 and older in accordance with local
regulations. Activists say that legalizing and taxing marijuana sales
would provide income for the state and free up law enforcement resources
currently dedicated to tracking down otherwise law-abiding citizens. The
rule has a chance of passing – an April 2009 field poll found that 56
percent of Californians favored legalizing pot for social use and taxing
its sales. Not everyone is on board, though: California Mothers Against
Drunk Driving say that the legalization of marijuana could cause
impaired driving and its attendant fatalities.

Where was Dick Cheney when this guy was flying around…

American Terror Suspect Traveled Freely

It’s not a good sign when a terror suspect can travel to Pakistan’s tribal areas unimpeded. David C. Headley, an American suspect who allegedly helped plan the 2008 Mumbai bombing, moved freely between Pakistan, India, and the U.S. over almost seven years, The New York Times reports. According to documents Headley released as part of a plea agreement to spare him the death penalty, he traveled to the tribal area and al Qaeda stronghold of North Waziristan in Pakistan twice, and trained at well-known terrorist camps in Pakistan on five occasions from 2002 to 2005. More troubling is Headley’s alleged involvement with a European terrorist cell that planned to attack the Copenhagen offices of the newspaper that printed cartoons about the Prophet Muhammad. Headley’s story also details the close relationship between Al Qaeda and the Pakistani militant group Lashkar-e-Taiba.

Improper Admission of Evidence

March 24, 2010 by tcbdefense | Edit
Evidence 1st Dist.
People v. Jackson , No. 1-04-3660 (March 10, 2010) Cook Co. (COLEMAN) Reversed and remanded.
Defendant was denied a fair trial by admission of evidence of other criminal acts. Prosecutor argued in rebuttal that motive for Defendant to murder his disabled mother was to obtain money for drugs, and State introduced evidence of his drug use. Unprosecuted drug use is admissible to show motive only if after establishing that the defendant was addicted and lacked financial resources to sustain habit, and neither was shown in this case. Commentary on drug use was bad-character accusation prohibited by rule against admission of other crimes to show criminal propensity.

“Victory for U.S. on detainees”

ScotusBlog has the story here:

The Supreme Court voted on Monday to leave intact a lower court ruling that took away almost all of the power of federal judges to block, even temporarily, the transfer of detainees out of Guantanamo Bay. The Court, in a brief order, denied review of the D.C. Circuit Court’s ruling in April in Kiyemba v. Obama (Supreme Court docket 09-581), now informally known as “Kiyemba II.” This marked a significant victory for the federal government, enhancing its authority to decide when and where to send detainees that are cleared for release from confinement without interference by federal judges and without challenge by detainees’ lawyers.

March 22, 2010 | Permalink

This is a good idea….

Paul C. Giannelli (Case Western Reserve University School of Law) has posted Independent Crime Laboratories: The Problem of Motivational and Cognitive Bias (Utah Law Review, Forthcoming) on SSRN. Here is the abstract:

One of the most controversial recommendations in the National Academy of Sciences report on forensic science — Strengthening Forensic Science in the United States: The Path Forward — concerns the removal of crime laboratories from the administrative control of law enforcement agencies. For decades scholars have commented on the “inbred bias of crime laboratories affiliated with law enforcement agencies.” Some commentators have proposed independent laboratories as the remedy for this problem, and in 2002, the Illinois Governor’s Commission on Capital Punishment proposed the establishment of an independent state crime laboratory. This essay documents the problems that triggered the NAS Report’s recommendation. It also examines the counter arguments as well as alternative approaches, including additional measures that should protect forensic analyses from improper influence.

Search of Auto

Barbara E. Armacost (University of Virginia School of Law) has posted Arizona V. Gant: Does it Matter? (2009 Supreme Court Review, 2010) on SSRN. Here is the abstract:

Prior to the Supreme Court’s recent opinion in Arizona v Gant, it was standard practice under New York v Belton for police to conduct a search incident to arrest (SITA) of the passenger compartment whenever they arrested the driver or a recent occupant of the vehicle. Police officers had begun to treat the SITA of a vehicle as a powerful investigative tool, using traffic stops and arrests to get a free search for evidence of more serious crimes At least as a formal matter, Arizona v Gant changed all this. In Gant the Supreme Court reviewed a Fourth Amendment challenge to an automobile search incident to arrest conducted after the driver had been arrested, handcuffed and secured in the police car. The Court held that police may not do a SITA of an automobile once the arrestee “has been secured and cannot access the interior of the vehicle” unless it is “reasonable to believe evidence relevant to the crime of arrest might be found in the vehicle.” For all practical purposes this holding means the end of Belton SITAs. It is standard protocol for police to order a potential arrestee out of his automobile, frisk him, handcuff him, and secure him in the officer’s vehicle. This means that SITAs of automobiles will almost never be justified.

Latest on Search and Seizure

The trial court erroneously denied the defendant’s motion to suppress because a sheriff’s deputy didn’t have a warrant or consent to enter an apartment where the defendant was found and there were no exigent circumstances that would justify the deputy’s entry and search of the apartment.
The Illinois Appellate Court, 2nd District, has reversed defendant Dejuan Davis’s convictions for unlawful possession of a controlled substance with intent to deliver and unlawful possession of cannabis with intent to deliver. Lake County Circuit Judge Victoria A. Rossetti presided in the trial court.

After the defendant was charged in October 2007, he filed a motion to suppress all evidence and statements obtained as a result of the allegedly illegal entry into and search of his apartment.

At a hearing on the motion, John Willer, a Lake County sheriff’s deputy, testified that on Sept. 16, 2007, he responded to a call to assist another deputy in connection with a traffic altercation in Lake Villa. The defendant, his girlfriend and another man were accused of attacking Stephanie Harrison, who allegedly owed money to the defendant and his girlfriend for drugs.

Harrison told the deputy he knew the location of the girlfriend’s apartment in Antioch and that illegal drugs could be purchased at the apartment at any time. The deputy and several other officers went to the apartment and when they arrived, they heard several voices. Willer said he tried to open a door to the apartment but that it was locked.

When the defendant’s girlfriend came out of the apartment, she told the officers that the defendant was still in the apartment. Willer then entered the apartment although the defendant’s girlfriend never told him that he had permission to enter. When the defendant came out, he was arrested and Willer entered the apartment although he didn’t have permission to do so.

During a search of the apartment, Willer found a loaded handgun, a digital scale, a substance that was determined to be cocaine and cannabis.

The trial court denied the defendant’s motion to suppress, finding that neither the defendant nor his girlfriend told Willer he couldn’t enter the apartment and that once the defendant and his girlfriend were arrested, it was necessary for the officers to enter the apartment because there were young children in the apartment who couldn’t be left alone. The court also noted that Willer had information that drugs were being sold from the apartment.

After a jury trial, the defendant was found guilty of the drug charges and was sentenced to concurrent 11-year and five-year prison terms. On appeal, the defendant argued that the trial court erroneously denied his motion to suppress because the deputy’s entry into the apartment was warrantless, non-consensual and not justified by exigent circumstances.

The appeals court agreed and reversed. The court said that absent exigent circumstances, police may not enter a private residence to make a warrantless search or arrest. In this case, the appeals court said that Willer had neither a warrant nor consent to enter the apartment and that the entry and search were not supported by exigent circumstances.

“The evidence … does not support a finding of exigent circumstances because it does not suggest an immediacy or real threat of current danger or likelihood of flight,” the appeals court said. “Nor do the circumstances of this case indicate that the delay involved in obtaining an arrest warrant for defendant would have impeded the investigation or the apprehension of defendant.”

In addition, the appeals court said the police had no reason to believe that the defendant was armed or otherwise posed a threat to the police or others and there was no evidence that the police suspected the defendant of being armed. There also was no evidence that the defendant was likely to flee unless he was swiftly apprehended and so the doctrine of “hot pursuit” wasn’t applicable to the defendant.

“In sum, we conclude that Willer’s entry into defendant’s apartment and his discovery of the scale and white powder … were unlawful,” the court said. “Without the illegally seized evidence, the state could not prevail at trial because defendant’s convictions rested solely upon the illegally seized evidence and his statements that he owned the illegally seized evidence.”

People v. Dejuan Davis, No. 2-08-0168. Presiding Justice Kathryn E. Zenoff wrote the court’s opinion with Justices John J. Bowman and Ann B. Jorgensen concurring. Released Feb. 24, 2010.