Police will no longer be able to use the smell of marijuana to justify searching a vehicle without a warrant, the Illinois ...
Law enforcement officers in Illinois cannot rely on the smell of burnt cannabis alone to justify searching a vehicle without ...
Law enforcement officers in Illinois cannot rely on the smell of burnt cannabis alone to justify searching a vehicle without a warrant, the Illinois Supreme Court ruled on Thursday.
An odor of burnt marijuana doesn’t justify a search of a car without a warrant in Illinois. That’s the ruling Thursday from ...
In a 6-0 ruling, the court found that cannabis laws in Illinois had evolved to the point that just catching a whiff of burnt ...
The smell of burnt marijuana is no longer grounds to search a vehicle, the Illinois Supreme Court ruled Thursday.
The Illinois Supreme Court ruled 6-0 that without other suspicious circumstances, such as a driver failing to stop for some ...
Illinois Supreme Court rules that the smell of cannabis alone cannot justify warrantless vehicle searches, reinforcing ...
Simply smelling burnt cannabis does not give a police officer the right to conduct a warrantless search of an automobile, the ...
The Illinois Supreme Court published seven opinions Thursday, including a ruling on a challenge to the constitutionality of a policy related to Firearm Owner’s Identification cards and a quantum ...
Reversing a previous ruling from before the legalization of marijuana, the Illinois Supreme Court ruled Thursday that the ...
An odor of burnt marijuana doesn't justify a search of a car without a warrant in Illinois, the state Supreme Court said ...