Defendant was stopped for a traffic offense, and the officer thought it suspicious that he insisted on calling his lawyer on his cell phone. (Never before in 1,000 stops.) The officer told him not to and he did anyway. Defendant also wouldn’t look at the officer and his breathing escalated. All this added up to reasonable suspicion. By this time, bystanders were accumulating and talking to the officers. “Another individual complained that law enforcement was “‘always bothering people’” or words to that effect. They called in a drug dog, and that was “a moment of truth” because, if the dog alerted, a search would occur, but if it didn’t, defendant would be let go. The officer entered the car over defendant’s objection to turn on the fan and roll up the windows to make it more likely that the dog would alert, and the dog did alert. That entry violated the Fourth Amendment under Jones because it trespassed on the interior of the car. United States v. Taylor, 2013 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 68388 (S.D. W.Va. May 14, 2013):
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