California Legal Brief

AI-Generated Practitioner Briefs of California Appellate Opinions

suppression motion

5 opinions tagged “suppression motion”

P. v. Demolle 6/1/26 SC

The Rule of People v. Demolle is that a suspect's consent to provide a blood sample is not the product of an unlawful detention where the encounter remains consensual, under circumstances where a reasonable person would feel free to leave or terminate the encounter despite being taken to a police station and briefly held in locked interview rooms.

P. v. Stayner 4/30/26 SC

The Rule of People v. Stayner is that a defendant's statement "I prefer not to talk now" during a Miranda advisement does not constitute an unambiguous invocation of Miranda rights when the defendant subsequently agrees to be interviewed at a different location, under circumstances where the defendant was told he was not under arrest, voluntarily agreed to travel with FBI agents, and later voluntarily waived his Miranda rights and signed a waiver form before making any incriminating statements.

P. v. Perez 3/10/26 CA4/3

The Rule of People v. Perez is that police officers may not order a person out of a residence based solely on reasonable suspicion without probable cause and a warrant, even when the officers remain outside the residence, under circumstances where the person is seized while still inside the home.

P. v. Anderson 3/13/26 CA6

The Rule of People v. Anderson is that the good faith exception to the exclusionary rule applies to CalECPA violations, permitting admission of electronic device evidence when law enforcement reasonably believed they had valid consent from an authorized possessor, under circumstances where a deceased person's next of kin consents to search the decedent's phone and no other person has a stronger claim to possession.

P. v. Super. Ct. 5/14/26 CA6

The Rule of People v. Superior Court (Feghhi) is that an officer's failure to inform a magistrate in a search warrant application that a DUI defendant requested a breath test does not undermine the validity of the warrant authorizing seizure of a blood sample, under circumstances where the warrant was otherwise supported by probable cause based on objective signs of intoxication and the defendant's involvement in a fatal DUI crash.