Legal Question in Criminal Law in Montana
Illegal search and no rights read
I was at a party with some friends, and we had
had some alcohol. An observer cop knocked on
the door, wearing civilian clothes. One boy
answered the door, thinking it was a neighbor
trying to quiet us down. The observer cop walked
into the house a few steps, followed by 2
policemen, who were dressed in police clothes.
They told all of the kids to sit down at the dining
room table, and then began to search the house
for hiding kids, they found some, and eventually
everyone sat down at the table. Then they started
writing tickets and calling parents, WITHOUT
reading us our rights. They also gave us breath
tests and asked a few people how much beer we
had consumed. They also said that someone
had called about the noise, but never asked us to
quiet down. I would like to know, if the police
performed and illegal search of the house, since
they did not have a warrant? Also, could possibly
the information be thrown out of the process since
it might have been attained illegally? And were
the breath tests legal?
Thank You Very Much
1 Answer from Attorneys
Re: Illegal search and no rights read
1. They had a right to enter and search the house if they had reasonable cause to believe that a crime(s) was being comitted at the time;
2. They have no obligation to read you the Miranda rights unless they are questioning you;
3. You could have refused the breath test, and if you did not then it is admissible;
4. Don't drink if you are underage.
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