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4 answers

It would depend on the very specific circumstances of your case. You have given no where enough information for anyone to make an informed decision.

Remember, in a suppression hearing you have to prove the evidence was obtained illegally and that it is unlikely that the evidence would have been discovered in the due course of the investigation.

If the cop said "you mind if I look?" and you said "no" your chances are pretty slim.

2007-08-13 08:41:52 · answer #1 · answered by davidmi711 7 · 0 1

I won a suppression hearing took 8 months I was bound over to superior court. The cops obtained a illegal search warrant by telling the judge I was in the area of a commercial burglary. they did not tell the judge that night they took me to the business owner to ID me and he could not ID. He told the police it was 3 black men I am a white girl. Cops went and got a warrant but obtained it maliciously they found a few guns in my house and some other stuff was looking at 8 years but it was all dropped because it was an illegal search warrant, based on they were already told it was not me by the business owner.. LOL Laughing my *** off

2007-08-14 02:50:39 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Like anything else that involves the court, it depends on the evidence, witnesses, and circumstanes involved. Oftentimes, it is easy to show there was probability for a stop. It just takes an officer saying there was probable cause to do the stop. Searches are more complicated. Either way, unless you are learned in the law, I would recomend getting an attorney to do the motion for you.

2007-08-13 08:41:45 · answer #3 · answered by Phoebe Finch 5 · 0 0

Supression hearings made me alot of OT money over the years. Never lost a one.

2007-08-13 09:34:52 · answer #4 · answered by LEO53 6 · 0 0

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