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The court granted our motion to Suppress and Dismiss all evidence
“ The manner by which the evidence was seized violated the accused 4th Amendment Rights, and therefore that evidence is suppressed and all charges shall be dismissed. “
Just leaving Gaylord, where they are still felony prosecuting folks for cannabis. We just completed the second day of an evidentiary hearing and Komorn Law PLLC is happy to report the the Court granted our motion to Suppress and Dismiss all evidence; which included all of the alleged felony Marihuana evidence and the alleged Psilocybin evidence.
The Judge, was well prepared, well researched and delivered a lengthy and detailed analysis of the issues which included but was not limited to the following:
Warrantless Searches are Presumptively invalid, unless the state establishes an exception.
In this case the execution of the eviction order was a recognized exceptions. However that exception is limited to Safety Sweep, which had been exhausted. The next factual sequence involved a search of a drawer, where a firearm was allegedly found.
The Court determined this was an unreasonable search and seizure of the firearm, but this did us no good because my client was not charged with any gun charges.
The court went on to find somewhere in the time line of the execution of the order of eviction, my client allegedly consented to the search, ( usually not good). What was remarkable to me was that the Court found that while there was consent to search, that consent does not allow the seizure of property that is not illegal or probable cause of a crime ( in this case “ marihuana”).
The Court went on to read from MRTMA section 2/4/5/15, correctly concluding that the 10 ounces within the dwelling was not illegal ( civil infraction) and not a crime, and even consent to search does not provide consent to seize items that were not illegal.
The Court then went on to find that the State did not carry its burden of rebutting the presumption of the warrantless search and seizure of the alleged psilocybin. I kept waiting for the judge to find an exception or some reason to justify the search and seizure but it never happened. I even held my breath for the “Good Faith” exception ruling that sometimes happens and that to was not a finding the court made.
Anyhow, it is always rewarding as a lawyer when you go to lengths to establish the illegality or unconstitutionality of a search ( or some government action) and the court agrees. Prosecutor threatening appeal. For now we are calling it a Huge Win.
If you or someone you know has been accused of a crime or DUI.
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