No. 20-8352
David Alexandre v. United States
Response WaivedIFP
Tags: 4th-amendment circuit-split criminal-activity criminal-procedure fourth-amendment nexus-requirement probable-cause search-warrant supreme-court
Key Terms:
FourthAmendment CriminalProcedure Privacy
FourthAmendment CriminalProcedure Privacy
Latest Conference:
2021-09-27
Question Presented (AI Summary)
Did the United States Court of Appeals for the First Circuit erroneously hold the government was not required to establish probable cause to the believe Defendant Alexandre himself was involved in the distribution of crystal methamphetamine in order to obtain a valid search warrant to search his residence?
Question Presented (OCR Extract)
QUESTIONS PRESENTED 1. Did the United States Court of Appeals for the First Circuit erroneously hold the government was not required to establish probable cause to the believe Defendant Alexandre himself was involved in the distribution of crystal methamphetamine in order to obtain a valid search warrant to search his residence?
Docket Entries
2021-10-04
Petition DENIED.
2021-07-01
DISTRIBUTED for Conference of 9/27/2021.
2021-06-24
Waiver of right of respondent United States to respond filed.
2021-06-15
Petition for a writ of certiorari and motion for leave to proceed in forma pauperis filed. (Response due July 21, 2021)
Attorneys
David Alexandre
Robert Clayton Andrews — Robert C. Andrews Esquire, PC, Petitioner
United States
Brian H. Fletcher — Acting Solicitor General, Respondent