Articles Tagged with Suppression Hearing North Carolina

Search incident to arrest can be a consequential tool for law enforcement. It comes up in traffic stops, DWI investigations, drug arrests, and other enforcement actions in North Carolina on a daily basis. When a search incident to a lawful arrest takes place, evidence of criminal acts may be properly admitted. When a search exceeds the bounds of law, a Motion to Suppress may prove dispositive.

This article lays out the criminal law in plain terms, with references to the North Carolina and United States Supreme Court cases that matter most when this issue ends up before a judge.

The Probable Cause Foundation|Why the Search Incident to Arrest Exception Exists at All

If a “knock and talk” crosses the constitutional line, can what officers saw or learned still justify Two uniformed police officers standing at a doorway during a knock and talk investigation in North Carolina, illustrating Fourth Amendment search and seizure and probable cause issues in criminal defense cases a search warrant?

TL;DR Quick Take: North Carolina v. Norman tests the limits of North Carolina’s knock and talk doctrine and asks whether a search warrant can survive when officers use observations gathered during a questionable encounter on private property.

The decision turns on three interrelated questions:

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