Page 137 - Legal Guide DEMO
P. 137
LLRMI - DEMO LLRMI - DEMO LLRMI - DEMO LLRMI - DEMO LLRMI - DEMO LLRMI - DEMO
LLRMI - DEMO
LLRMI - DEMO
LLRMI - DEMO
LLRMI - DEMO Task: Randomly Running License Plates LLRMI - DEMO
LLRMI - DEMO
United States v. Matthews, 615 F.2d 1279 (10 Cir. 1980).
th
LLRMI - DEMO LLRMI - DEMO LLRMI - DEMO LLRMI - DEMO LLRMI - DEMO LLRMI - DEMO
United States v. Walraven, 892 F.2d 972 (10 Cir. 1989).
th
Olabisiomotosho v. City of Houston, 185 F.3d 521 (5 Cir. 1999).
th
LLRMI - DEMO LLRMI - DEMO LLRMI - DEMO LLRMI - DEMO LLRMI - DEMO LLRMI - DEMO
Federal and State Courts which have considered whether or not an
officer may randomly run vehicle license plates in a public place
have concluded that there is no privacy/Fourth Amendment interest
in a license plate which is visible on the outside of a vehicle. Thus,
LLRMI - DEMO LLRMI - DEMO LLRMI - DEMO LLRMI - DEMO LLRMI - DEMO LLRMI - DEMO
officers may randomly run license plates.
LLRMI - DEMO LLRMI - DEMO LLRMI - DEMO LLRMI - DEMO LLRMI - DEMO LLRMI - DEMO
136
©2020 Jack Ryan Legal & Liability Risk Management Institute
LLRMI - DEMO LLRMI - DEMO LLRMI - DEMO LLRMI - DEMO LLRMI - DEMO LLRMI - DEMO