Wear your seatbelt in New Jersey! 
I was pulled over by a cop for not wearing my seatbelt. The passenger in my car was a coworker, Steve, who I was taking to the job site. Steve also wasn't wearing his seatbelt, so he was getting a ticket as well. He didn't have identification on him, so the cop asked a series of questions to better confirm the name when he would run it through the system.
After running the name through the system, the cop gave me my seatbelt ticket and asked me to step away from the car. A crowd of cops had arrived by that point, one of which had brought a dog. Steve was asked to step from the car, and he was promptly cuffed and taken to one of the cruisers. He had a handful of warrants for outstanding fines.
Standard proceedure so far, I would guess. The next step was a surprise to me as they brought the dog to my car and began crawling through the car searching it. None of the cops asked my permission, though they did repeatedly ask me if there was anything illegal in the car. Knowing that nothing was in the car, I kept answering "Nope, the car is clean", but I never agreed to the search or gave my permission.
Here is my problem with the situation. As I understand the law, police are allowed to search the immediate vicinity of a crime scene or an arrest scene to find evidence of the crime. In this case, the crime was not wearing a seatbelt and not paying certain court fines. The way I see it, there was no cause for the search, as there would not reasonably be further evidence of the crimes hidden within the car.
As it turns out, the dog sniffed out a positive on the passenger side of the car, in the little compartment on the door. A pack of cigarettes was found and a roach was found in the pack. It was obvious to all the police who the pack belonged to, so they simply confronted Steve and he admitted to owning it.
The cops were all in agreement that I had no knowledge of the weed, and there was no need to involve me further in the matter, though they did continue to comb through my car.
So, I'm searching the web for specific laws regarding the legal searching process. Mostly academic, of course, since I'm not being prosecuted for anything, but Steve is now facing two drug charges for posession when the evidence may have been found illegally.
The way I see it (and I could be wrong) is that the search was conducted without cause (since no evidence could possibly be found for the crimes committed), and therefore any evidence found through that search would be illegal.
So, anyone have any thoughts on the matter?
Oh, if you're driving in New Jersey, wear your seatbelt.
I was pulled over by a cop for not wearing my seatbelt. The passenger in my car was a coworker, Steve, who I was taking to the job site. Steve also wasn't wearing his seatbelt, so he was getting a ticket as well. He didn't have identification on him, so the cop asked a series of questions to better confirm the name when he would run it through the system.
After running the name through the system, the cop gave me my seatbelt ticket and asked me to step away from the car. A crowd of cops had arrived by that point, one of which had brought a dog. Steve was asked to step from the car, and he was promptly cuffed and taken to one of the cruisers. He had a handful of warrants for outstanding fines.
Standard proceedure so far, I would guess. The next step was a surprise to me as they brought the dog to my car and began crawling through the car searching it. None of the cops asked my permission, though they did repeatedly ask me if there was anything illegal in the car. Knowing that nothing was in the car, I kept answering "Nope, the car is clean", but I never agreed to the search or gave my permission.
Here is my problem with the situation. As I understand the law, police are allowed to search the immediate vicinity of a crime scene or an arrest scene to find evidence of the crime. In this case, the crime was not wearing a seatbelt and not paying certain court fines. The way I see it, there was no cause for the search, as there would not reasonably be further evidence of the crimes hidden within the car.
As it turns out, the dog sniffed out a positive on the passenger side of the car, in the little compartment on the door. A pack of cigarettes was found and a roach was found in the pack. It was obvious to all the police who the pack belonged to, so they simply confronted Steve and he admitted to owning it.
The cops were all in agreement that I had no knowledge of the weed, and there was no need to involve me further in the matter, though they did continue to comb through my car.
So, I'm searching the web for specific laws regarding the legal searching process. Mostly academic, of course, since I'm not being prosecuted for anything, but Steve is now facing two drug charges for posession when the evidence may have been found illegally.
The way I see it (and I could be wrong) is that the search was conducted without cause (since no evidence could possibly be found for the crimes committed), and therefore any evidence found through that search would be illegal.
So, anyone have any thoughts on the matter?
Oh, if you're driving in New Jersey, wear your seatbelt.