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Street Cop Podcast

Tinted Windows / Parked Vehicles / Roadside Questioning

Street Cop Podcast

Street Cop Training

Education

4.9933 Ratings

🗓️ 9 September 2021

⏱️ 13 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In this archive episode, Dennis answers a variety of questions regarding tinted windows, parked vehicles, and roadside questioning. Recorded on 09/27/2017. Questioning on an MV STOP May request a motorist’s driving credentials. Should advise the motorist of the reason for the stop. May run a computer check. May ask questions reasonably related to the reason for the traffic stop; **Inconsistent or contradictory answers provided by the vehicle’s occupants may then permit an officer to broaden the inquiry and ask more intrusive questions designed to confirm or dispel suspicions of criminal activity** May issue a citation State v Chapman (2000) http://caselaw.findlaw.com/nj-superior-court-appellate-division/1035452.html?fbclid=IwAR1X5LUDBHV979jXVpi8xKbhZCnw8qljo9qZAqbsJ6bYA_yEzA7w_RPlOIE (http://caselaw.findlaw.com/nj-superior-court.../1035452.html) State v Hickman (2000) The question posed in this case by the officer was “You look really nervous, do you have something on you that you should surrender right now? Any contraband, weapons, anything like that?’ Defendant admitted to it and handed over a bag of cocaine from his shoe. When the police lawfully conduct a motor vehicle stop they may question the occupants, even on a subject unrelated to the purpose of the stop, without violating the Fourth Amendment, so long as such questioning does not extend the duration of the stop. Roadside questioning of a motorist is not transformed into “custodial interrogation” that must be preceded by Miranda warnings simply because a police officer's questioning is accusatory in nature or designed to elicit incriminating evidence. According to the court the brief questioning of the defendant after the lawful motor vehicle stop of the car in which he was the passenger was perfectly valid. Thus, in Berkemer, the Court held that a police officer was not required to give Miranda warnings to a suspected drunk driver before asking him whether “he had been using intoxicants. Similarly, in State v. Toro, 229 N.J.Super. 215, 551 A.2d 170 (App.Div.1988), we held that police officers who observed a package at the foot of a driver stopped for a motor vehicle offense, which they suspected was a container for drugs, could ask what was in the package without giving Miranda warnings. Although the police officers in Toro ordered the driver out of the car and frisked him for weapons before questioning him, we concluded that the questioning was not “custodial”: A traffic stop is presumptively temporary and brief and thus questioning incident to an ordinary traffic stop is quite different from stationhouse interrogation. Miranda warnings may be needed, however, if the totality of the circumstances surrounding the stop "impose a restraint on freedom of movement of the degree associated with a formal arrest." However, this is changed when you smell marijuana with the intention to arrest for the odor. STATE v. HICKMAN | FindLaw

Transcript

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0:00.0

One another one that can't get a way.

0:02.0

I don't get a way.

0:04.0

Uh-huh.

0:05.0

You trying to be a street cop?

0:10.0

I'm going to continue from yesterday answering some questions that I got a bunch coming in and

0:15.5

so the guys who wrote me today have your questions they're printed out but get to me tomorrow

0:19.7

found that if I'm answering too many questions in these videos get very long and drawn out.

0:24.0

So for the purposes of a timely video where people aren't getting bored, we're going to address

0:28.5

the remainder questions from yesterday.

0:30.0

I'll get to the other ones tomorrow. And there are some good questions.

0:34.2

We're gonna again attach the literature

0:36.6

from where it comes from, the hyperlinks

0:38.0

so you guys can click and read and see.

0:39.8

So if it's non-believers, you can read it yourself, yourself okay so the first question I get is I don't

0:47.1

want to say names here you know who you are when you read it let's see it says a

0:52.2

blah so for tints it is Let's see, uh, blah blah blah.

0:52.6

So for Tints, it is a primary stop years and years ago when the Senate passed a bill on

0:59.4

tinted motor vehicles, um, you would, you would actually get, let me just make sure, like the right thing,

1:06.6

I think what's the fewers, usually more people coming on. There we go, there's four viewers.

1:10.4

All right, make sure. So that's like a live cop training and nobody gets notified, but people are sort of catch on now. Okay, cool. So, tinted windows, primary violation, primary stops, Dave V. Cohen, 3-74 New Jersey, front windows, front windshield.

1:25.4

They go off the administrative code from the, uh, from New Jersey MVC, where they do inspections,

1:32.1

that's what the court addressed in

...

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