If a warrant is invalid or improperly obtained, all evidence uncovered by that warrant should be inadmissable. That the officers were acting in good faith is meaningless. IF I'm driving down the highway at 65 MPH and believe the speed limit is 65, when it is actually 55, my action that I'm taking in good faith does not shield me from a ticket. Ignorance is no excuse from the law. Unless you're law enforcement I guess.
On the post: Another Court Finds FBI's NIT Warrants To Be Invalid, But Credits Agents' 'Good Faith' To Deny Suppression
The "Good Faith" exception should go away
On the post: Remember How US Marshals Seized All Those 'Hoverboards' At CES In A Patent Dispute? The Company Has Now Dropped The Case
Senior partner: "If that happens, we'll address it with a Future Motion...
(puts on sunglasses)
to dismiss."
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