Tuesday, December 20, 2011

DUI's Can Be Turned Around If the Situation Is Right.


In late October, the Kansas Court of Appeals reversed and remanded a Johnson County District Court DUI conviction after finding that the officer did not have reasonable suspicion to stop the defendant’s vehicle.  State v. Edwards, 262 P.3d 358 (Kan. Ct. App. 2011).  Defendant Edwards was arrested in November 2008 and charged with felony DUI and refusal to take a preliminary breath test after an officer followed him into a Hy-Vee parking lot.  The officer initially became suspicious of the defendant when he stopped at a stop sign “for quite awhile”, slowly crossed the street, and then accelerated quickly.  The officer began following Edwards.  When Defendant Edwards pulled into a Hy-Vee parking lot and parked into the back of the store, the officer activated her emergency lights and pulled up behind him because she felt the vehicle was trying to avoid her.  Later, Defendant Edwards failed to perform a series of DUI test so the officer arrested him.  The trial court convicted Edwards on both charges but the Court of Appeals reversed because the appellate court found that the officer’s decision to stop Edwards was not based on reasonable suspicion and that no facts supported the officer’s conclusion that Edwards was trying to elude her.
If you have any questions or concerns regarding what you considered to be an unwarranted traffic stop, contact Lindsey and Dionne at www.ericksonscherff.com for counsel and assessment of your charges.


Tuesday, December 6, 2011

Cameras in Court?


If you find yourself in Judges Vratil, Martin, Murguia, Robinson, or Melgren’s Kansas District Court to participate in a hearing, such hearing may be recorded.  Kansas is one of fourteen United State District Courts to participate in a study placing cameras in courts.  The previously mentioned judges are those participating, who either favor or disfavor having cameras in the courtroom.  However, before the cameras can be turned on a few things must happen.  First, all the parties involved must give consent for the proceeding to be recorded.  Second, the judge has the discretion to order that the proceeding not be recorded.  Finally, criminal proceedings can not be recorded.    

Wednesday, November 16, 2011

Get Your Signals Straight


On February 24, 2009 Mr. Shigemura was pulled over for failing to use his turn signal when crossing toll plaza lanes, he was attempting to reach the only toll booth open, which was the “last one on the very right side of the roadway.”  United States v. Kitchell, 653 F.3d 1206, 1211 (10th Cir. 2011).  It took Trooper Hyde 21 minutes and 45 seconds to issue Mr. Shigemura a warning ticket.  Id. at 1218.  Because Mr. Shigemura and his passengers, including defendant Kitchell, were unable to tell the trooper the same story as to why they were traveling in a rental car and the multiple tasks Trooper Hyde had to perform in examining three individuals (driver, front seat passenger, back seat passenger) the lengthy traffic stop was not found to be unreasonable.  Id.  In the end, back seat defendant John Kitchell was arrested and convicted for possessing firearms (found in the trunk of the car).  Id.  at 1211. 
If you have questions or concerns regarding what you considered a unreasonably lengthy traffic stop contact Lindsey and Dionne at www.ericksonscherff.com for counsel and assessment of your charges. 

Monday, November 7, 2011

Say what you Mean... Mean what you say...

On July first the Kansas Court of Appeals held that the terms “obtains” and “exerts control over” in the theft statute did not create an alternative means that requires the state to prove both means.  State v. Rollins, 46 Kan. App. 2d 17, 20, 257 P.3d 839, 843 (2011). Defendant Rollins, a Wall Ties employee, stole “skids” of aluminum forms on the evening of July 31, 2008.  His actions were caught by nighttime videos.  Id.  at 19. 
During trial, Rollins argued that the state had failed to prove both means of the crime of theft, pursuant to the statute.  Id.  at 20.   Looking to the plain meaning of the statute, the court concluded that there is “no quantifiable difference between the actions that constitute obtaining or exerting; these words create a distinction without a difference.  One must necessarily obtain property one has exerted control over, and one must necessarily exert control over property one has obtained.” 

If you have questions or concerns regarding a theft charge, contact Lindsey and Dionne atwww.ericksonscherff.com for counsel and assessment of your claims.  

Thursday, November 3, 2011

Get Your Story Straight....


In June of 2009 highway troopers pulled up behind the stopped vehicle of defendant, Thomas Perkins.  State v. Perkins, 46 Kan. App. 2d 121, 122 (2011).  According to the passenger, he and Perkins were switching drivers because Perkins’ back was hurting, when in fact he was highly intoxicated.  Id.  But, while at trial, Perkins and the passenger testified that the passenger had been driving the entire time and that they only pulled over when Perkins got sick.  The jury didn’t buy it.  Id. 
On appeal, Perkins argued that there was insufficient evidence to support that he was driving or attempting to drive a vehicle under the influence.  Id. at 123.  The Kansas Court of Appeals held that attempting to operate a vehicle, functionally operates as an alternative means of driving under the influence.  Id. at 121.  
If you have questions or concerns regarding a DUI offense contact Lindsey and Dionne at www.ericksonscherff.com for counsel and assessment of your claims.  

Thursday, October 27, 2011

New Supreme Court Decision

This past June the Supreme Court of the United States handed down a 7-2 decision in Davis v. United States that faded the “exclusionary rule.”  Davis, the petitioner, was a passenger in a vehicle when it was pulled over.  Davis was first arrested for providing the police with a false name, and then found to have violated a federal statute because the police found a gun in his coat pocket.  Davis was a convicted felon. 
Prior to the Eleventh Circuit’s decision of Davis’s appeal, the Court found in Arizona v. Gant that searches like Davis’s were illegal. The court found that while the search did violate Davis’s constitutional rights, it could not however be excluded evidence and could be used at trial.  The Court reasoned that the exclusionary rule is meant to deter officers from illegal activity, and because the police, at the time, were making a good-faith effort to conduct the search within the current law they could not have know they were violating his rights.  Suppression, the court found, would not serve as deterrence.

Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Protect Your 4th Amendment Rights


On July 23, 2007 Joshua Burchett, then 17, was driving without taillights when officer Billings attempted to pull Burchett over.  Mascorro v. Billings2011 WL 3836439, No. 10-7055, at *1 (10th Cir. Aug. 31, 2011).  Burchett resisted arrest when he drove two more blocks, ran into his parents’ home, and hid in the bathroom.  Id.  According to Burchett’s parents, Officer Billings pounded on their door demanding to come inside, pointed a gun at Jose Mascorro (Burchett’s step-father) when he opened the door, and sprayed the parents and 14 year-old son with mace as the officer broke into the home.  Id.  The Mascorro’s home was torn apart by Billings and fellow officers.  Id. at *2. 
On appeal, the 10th circuit refused to hear the officers plea for qualified immunity because their story of that night’s events were much different than the Mascorros’.  Id.  Furthermore, the court held that the Mascorros were protected under the Fourth Amendment against the forceful entry into their home by the officers.  Id.  at* 5.  The court reasoned that the officers were not entitled qualified immunity because the circumstances involving the arrest did not amount to exigent circumstances.  Id.  “[T]he pursuit of a misdemeanant” unlike the “hot pursuit of a felon” is not sufficient for forceful entry into a person’s home.  Id.  at *6.
If you believe, that like the Mascorro’s, your Fourth Amendment rights have been violated during an arrest, contact Lindsey and Dionne at www.ericksonscherff.com for counsel and an assessment of your claims.