Stop-and-search is conducted when officers have a reasonable suspicion that a person is carrying a weapon or stolen property. |
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Once they alerted to the car, the cops had reasonable suspicion plus exigent circumstances, so they had extra good justification to search. |
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What do you mean by a well-founded suspicion if you do not simply mean a reasonable suspicion? |
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Further, his detention was unlawful, not being founded upon reasonable suspicion of the commission by the Claimant of an arrestable offence. |
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Section 254, as I have said, does not extend the scope of the reasonable suspicion of the peace officer this far. |
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There must be additional circumstances to warrant a reasonable suspicion of such a violation. |
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A reasonable suspicion therefore must be founded on probable cause, coupled with good faith on the part of the peace officers making the arrest. |
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If this Court accepts that section 38 is applicable, then it is not a reasonable suspicion or reasonable grounds of apprehension giving rise to the arrest. |
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All the grounds require reasonable suspicion on the part of a constable. |
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There's good reason for, at a minimum, using a reasonable suspicion standard. |
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In other words, a police officer must have a reasonable suspicion that we have committed a crime before holding us in custody. |
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The gag rules have been enhanced on these letters, which allow surveillance without a judge's approval or even a reasonable suspicion that the target is a criminal. |
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In this context the Government believes that it is not necessary for the police to have a reasonable suspicion prior to the exercise of their powers. |
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Detentions should require reasonable suspicion. |
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Even an arrest only requires reasonable suspicion. |
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It is true that this requires a little more than reasonable suspicion. |
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The Court went on to reject the contention that the employer had no reasonable basis for conducting the surveillance: it had made its decision based upon a reasonable suspicion that Richardson had been sleeping on the job. |
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In addition, the WMD Act prohibits the provision of services where there is a reasonable suspicion or belief that the services would or may assist a WMD program. |
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Visitors shall only be searched if there is a reasonable suspicion that they may have something in their possession that threatens the safety and security of the institution. |
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In other words, the standard was not solely one of reasonable suspicion. |
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Firstly, to overcome the right to liberty there must be grounds to believe that the individual committed the offence or offences which are under investigation, that is to say that there must be a reasonable suspicion. |
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An officer may demand a sample of breath into an 'approved screening device' when the officer has reasonable suspicion that there is any alcohol in the driver's body. |
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A certified officer could demand a physical sobriety test or take a saliva or sweat sample at the roadside based on the reasonable suspicion of drug impairment. |
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It imposes reporting duties and provides for searches of persons, conveyances, baggage and mail on the basis of reasonable suspicion of unreported currency. |
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In practice, the matter becomes a little muddled at times because of the fact that a law enforcement officer may claim to have had reasonable suspicion of a person's actions so as to warrant search or even arrest. |
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