disneykid52
Member
Next thing you know when the pizza delivery guy comes to your door and a cop sees you pay him (or her) they (the cop) will be at your door insisting on a search of the pizza box.
Yes, you are correct on that. I should have phrased it differently.sorry zig, the officer does not determine if PC was actually present. They make their decision whether they believe it is or not. The courts are the entity that will make the actual determination.
That's just sillyNext thing you know when the pizza delivery guy comes to your door and a cop sees you pay him (or her) they (the cop) will be at your door insisting on a search of the pizza box.
...and therefore irrelevant. I'm sorry that it won't sink in for you.I wrote I knew my cases were not the LAW in CA.
Why don't you just post some Cali case law to support your assertions?Zinger, do you know what attorneys do when there isn't a case "on point"? They go to cases in other jurisdictions. It's called "persuasive authority". Look it up, learn something.
Besides, we're not quite talking about the LAW here. I bet the law in Ohio and California regarding probable cause is almost if not exactly the same. What we're doing is applying the facts to the law. When you read the cases you see that's what the courts do. They give the rule and then apply the facts to the rule to come up with a result.
Let those two things sink in to you. Persuasive Authority and Apply the Facts to the Law, and maybe you'll see why the questions and the posted cases are not irrelevant--unless one wishes to remain ignorant.
The examples you gave were from appellate judges in Ohio, not California.My "assumptions" are based on legal reasoning by trained appellate-level judges.
So cite it.I bet they're exactly the same.
HAND-TO-HAND EXCHANGES: A hand-to-hand ex-
change is not inherently suspicious. But it can be-
come so in light of the surrounding circumstances
and whether the officers could see the object that was
exchanged. For example, probable cause will likely
exist if officers were in an area where street sales of
drugs were prevalent and they saw a suspect ex-
change money for an object that appeared to be
drugs or a common container for drugs.
155
If officers could not identify the object that was
exchanged, the transaction may nevertheless be
deemed suspicious if there were other circumstances
that were indicative of a drug sale; e.g., just before
the exchange, the seller retrieved the item from an
apparent hiding place; or the suspects ran when
they saw the officers.
156
Please Senior Members, well at least Zinger and Blue Meanie, maybe you should do some lifting around here rather than just getting your post counts up. ElvenMelvin, why do I need to cite when no one else does? Also, for the record, it does seem California law comports with Ohio.155
See People v. Garrett (1972) 29 Cal.App.3d 535; People v. Stanfill (1985) 170 Cal.App.3d 420.
156
See People v. Limon (1993) 17 Cal.App.4th
524, 532; People v. Butler (2003) 111 Cal.App.4th
150, 162.
Nothing better than a case from OVER A DECADE AGO?? Geesh.I found an awesome resource which tells of the other facts which could be used IN COMBINATION with our facts here. It seems legit. (le.alcoda.org/publications/point_of_view/files/PC_TO_ARREST.pdf)It's called POINT OF VIEW from the Alameda County District Attorney's office. (Yes, Zinger, I know Costa Mesa is not in Alameda County. I await your glowing munificence on that point.)
A very relevant portion states (note the first sentence):
Please Senior Members, well at least Zinger and Blue Meanie, maybe you should do some lifting around here rather than just getting your post counts up. ElvenMelvin, why do I need to cite when no one else does?
another ignorant senior member. Are you serious? I've just posted what's known as controlling authority. Unless you have a more recent case which overturns those posted, they are the law in california.
Next thing you know when the pizza delivery guy comes to your door and a cop sees you pay him (or her) they (the cop) will be at your door insisting on a search of the pizza box.