No. 19-1468
Brian Anthony Wiley v. Tennessee
Response Waived
Tags: campsite-privacy civil-rights due-process fourth-amendment law-enforcement-conduct privacy private-property probable-cause search-and-seizure vehicle-search warrantless-search
Key Terms:
FourthAmendment CriminalProcedure Privacy
FourthAmendment CriminalProcedure Privacy
Latest Conference:
2020-09-29
Question Presented (AI Summary)
Whether the Fourth Amendment permits warrantless entry and search of a rented campsite
Question Presented (OCR Extract)
QUESTION PRESENTED Whether the Fourth Amendment of the United States Constitution permits police to enter a privately rented campsite without probable cause or invitation, question and detain the campsite’s resident in a tent within the campsite, and conduct a warrantless search of the resident’s car parked within the rented campsite?
Docket Entries
2020-10-05
Petition DENIED.
2020-07-15
DISTRIBUTED for Conference of 9/29/2020.
2020-07-10
Waiver of right of respondent State of Tennessee to respond filed.
2020-06-25
Petition for a writ of certiorari filed. (Response due August 6, 2020)
Attorneys
Brian Anthony Wiley
Charles Leland Davis — Davis & Hoss, PC, Petitioner
Charles Leland Davis — Davis & Hoss, PC, Petitioner
State of Tennessee
James E. Gaylord — Office of Tennessee Attorney General, Respondent
James E. Gaylord — Office of Tennessee Attorney General, Respondent