The lawyer was pulled over by police while driving a passenger for Uber in late February. The police officer who pulled him over said that he had stopped at a “drug house,” and demanded that the lawyer stop video recording the interaction. “Don’t record me,” he said, “turn that off, okay?”
The lawyer, no stranger to laws related to recording police, declined, citing his rights. When asked to step out of his car, the lawyer asked what he was being arrested for. The officer then told the lawyer that he was going to search his car, to which the lawyer did not consent. K-9 units were brought in and the officer claimed that the dogs indicated the presence of drugs in the car, which the lawyer insists did not happen. The car was then searched without the lawyer’s consent, and nothing was found.
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