State v. Gordon
Annotate this CasePolice officers applied for and obtained a search warrant for Defendant Edward Gordon's apartment after a woman reported that Defendant had sexually assaulted her. A jury convicted Defendant of second-degree sexual assault and deadlocked on Defendant's kidnapping charge. Defendant appealed, arguing (1) the superior court magistrate had no authority issue the search warrant, and (2) retrial on the charge of kidnapping would violate his rights with respect to the double-jeopardy provisions of the state and federal Constitutions. The Supreme Court affirmed, holding (1) the magistrate had the authority to issue the search warrant, and (2) the trial justice did not abuse his discretion when he determined that the jury was genuinely deadlocked, and therefore, retrial on the charge of kidnapping did not violate double jeopardy.
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