West Virginia Supreme Court to Determine Whether Cannabis Odor Alone Can Justify Home Searches – Ganjapreneur | Where to order Skittles Moonrock online
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The West Virginia Supreme Court is set to consider whether the odor of cannabis alone is enough to justify searching a personās home.
Full story after the jump.
The Supreme Court of West Virginia is considering a case that couldĀ determineĀ whetherĀ the odor of cannabis alone is enough to justify a search of a personās home, West Virginia Watch reports. TheĀ court is expected to rule on the appeal of Berkeley County Circuit Courtās ruling that threw out evidence police found in the search of a home afterĀ determiningĀ the āstrong odorā of cannabis. Excluding the evidence prohibited the state of prosecuting a man on drug charges.
In 2020, Aaron Lewis was arrested by Martinsburg police officers after coming to his home during a search for a suicidal woman. Lewis had no link to the woman, and his address was not implicated in theĀ emergency call. During the door-to-door search for the woman, officers stopped by Lewisās home and when his son answered the door, the officers detected theĀ āstrong odor of marijuana,ā according to court documents outlined by West Virginia Watch. The son refused to allow police to search the home,Ā but police entered the home anyway claiming they were performing a āprotective sweep.ā During the sweep, police found cash and two clear bowls with a leafy substance on the kitchen stove.
Two officers stayed at the residence to secure the scene while two others went and obtained a warrant to conduct a search on the Lewis home. A magistrate obtained the warrant, which included the seizure of drugs, according to court documents. During the now-warranted search, police found suspected cannabis, heroin, crack cocaine, a gun and 11 round of ammunition, and cash.
In 2023, an attorney for Lewis pushed to suppress all evidence seized in the case, contending that the initial āprotective sweepā violated the Fourth Amendment and that without that sweep, officers would only have been able to rely on the odor of cannabis in their warrant request to the judge.Ā Berkeley Court Judge Debra McLaughlin granted that motion, ruling the odor of cannabis was not enough to believe the homeĀ containedĀ evidence of illegal drug trafficking.
In a writ of prohibition in the case, Holly Mestemacher, an assistant attorney general for West Virginia, told the Supreme Court justices that ācourtās precedent is clearāĀ that cannabis odor āprovides probable cause for a searchā and that McLaughlinās ruling is a āclear andĀ substantialĀ legal error.ā
A decision in the case is expected before the end of theĀ courtāsĀ term on June 11.
TG joined Ganjapreneur in 2014 as a news writer and began hosting the Ganjapreneur podcast in 2016. He is based in upstate New York, where he also teaches media studies at a local university. More by TG Branfalt

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