CdwJava
Senior Member
Buying such an object would not be sufficient to justify a search here, either. But we are not talking about the possession of a single object that is lawful to purchase, we are talking about a set of circumstances which give rise to reasonable belief of criminal activity, and may well rise to probable cause to believe that a crime had occurred and that evidence of the crime (sales or purchase of controlled substances) was present in the vehicle.
The court cases you cite are also not similar. "... furtive hand movements without seeing anything exchanged ..." and, "... two occupants of a car were engaged in some sort of conversation with an individual leaning against the vehicle ..." and, "he leaned into the second and third cars and conducted what appeared to be some sort of hand transactions." Certainly, absent some OTHER articulable factors, cause based just on any one of those actions alone is weak. We do not have these situations in the scenario as presented by the OP and as inferred by the presence of two or more vehicles assigned to intercept the involved parties. We have a confluence of events and actions not a single act that was suspicious. There was obviously much more to the articulation than simply, "I saw two people sit in the car, talk, and pass something between them."
Like I said, this was a textbook deal, and appears to have been a textbook observation as well. I wouldn't be at all surprised if one of the two suspects was an informant and is playing at being a suspect, or if someone one of them knew was the informant. Either this was a deal of some kind, or the cops got terribly lucky and it was random chance that they happened to be sipping coffee catching up on their logs when they made the observation...then got lucky by finding unlawful meds. That kind of fortune is rare.
The court cases you cite are also not similar. "... furtive hand movements without seeing anything exchanged ..." and, "... two occupants of a car were engaged in some sort of conversation with an individual leaning against the vehicle ..." and, "he leaned into the second and third cars and conducted what appeared to be some sort of hand transactions." Certainly, absent some OTHER articulable factors, cause based just on any one of those actions alone is weak. We do not have these situations in the scenario as presented by the OP and as inferred by the presence of two or more vehicles assigned to intercept the involved parties. We have a confluence of events and actions not a single act that was suspicious. There was obviously much more to the articulation than simply, "I saw two people sit in the car, talk, and pass something between them."
Like I said, this was a textbook deal, and appears to have been a textbook observation as well. I wouldn't be at all surprised if one of the two suspects was an informant and is playing at being a suspect, or if someone one of them knew was the informant. Either this was a deal of some kind, or the cops got terribly lucky and it was random chance that they happened to be sipping coffee catching up on their logs when they made the observation...then got lucky by finding unlawful meds. That kind of fortune is rare.