You are a lawyer's wet dream. Unless you don't have a legal defense fund. And if you don't have the funds, you can be your cell mate's wet dream.
Of course you could always take matters into your own hands, and fight with the "cop" to keep him from looking at your phone, because you think he needs a search warrant to look at it, and you think he needs probably cause to get one and doesn't have probable cause. Then he can charge you with an additional charge of "arresting a search" along with assault on a "cop"!
Do you get your law from the Reader's Digest? Or out of your ass?
Originally Posted by LexusLover
Shit for brains:
Don't fight the hypothetical.
Does it really matter that I said a cop pulls you over for "speeding' as opposed to "broken headlight" as in the first post?
Does it really matter that I said Texas is a "child porn" free zone as opposed to all of the USA? Was there a point to your stupidity?
Does it really matter that a cop arrests you rather than tickets you for the broken headlight? Thanks for pointing out how Teddy Bundy got arrested. What does that have to do with searching the phone? Was there a point to your stupidity?
Did I mention anything about fighting the cop? Was there a reason you injected that stupidity into the conversation? Are you THAT desperate to change the subject?
Ohio v. Terry held that the 4th amendment protection against unreasonable search and seizure is not violated when a cop frisks someone without probable cause to arrest, if the cop has a "reasonable suspicion" that the person has committed, is committing, or is about to commit a crime AND has a reasonable belief that the person may be armed and dangerous.
So, what does THAT have to do with a cop looking at your text messages and the pictures on your iPhone? If he's got your phone already, we aren't talking about frisking you any more - that has been done already or may be done separately.
The SC held - and you apparently missed this part - that the cop needs to get a warrant to search a cell phone. "Reasonable suspicion" about a crime occurring or you being armed and dangerous doesn't apply to the contents of your phone.
Like Chief Justice Roberts said "Cell phones differ in both a quantitative and a qualitative sense from other objects that might be kept on an arrestee’s person.”
So, the whole POINT of Riley v. California was to CUT BACK on what the cops can do to your cell phone. Ohio v. Terry doesn't help them.
So, going back to our example(s) - broken headlight or speeding, you choose - arrested or ticketed, you choose - how does the cop get a warrant to search your cell phone? What does he tell the judge he has "probable cause" for?
It is not an answer to say "He can make up a lie and say he heard you talking about drugs with someone" and he needs a warrant to search to see who your drug buddy was.
If you assume lies to get around 4th amendment, then the exception swallows the rule.
So let's assume that the cop's partner won't back him up or there is video cam evidence that you weren't using the phone before or during the traffic stop. So he can't lie his way into a warrant.
Am I "looking correct" now?