State v. Taveras
Annotate this CaseDefendant Isabel Traveras was convicted of possession of an enumerated quantity of cocaine, for which she received a ten-year suspended sentence, with probation. On appeal, Defendant challenged the denial of her motion to suppress, alleging that the arresting police officers violated her Fourth Amendment rights when they (1) detained her unlawfully at a traffic stop and conducted a pat-down search without a reasonable articulable suspicion that she might be armed and dangerous, and (2) exceeded the scope of a permissible pat-down search by directing her to unzip and open her jacket. The Supreme Court affirmed, holding that, based on the totality of the circumstances, (1) the officers acquired the requisite reasonable suspicion to approach Defendant in the vehicle in which she was sitting as a passenger; and (2) the credible evidence was sufficient to establish that an officer's request to Defendant to open her jacket was reasonable and was a less-intrusive search designed to ensure officer safety.
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