07-15-2025, 03:40 AM
Let’s separate fact from fiction.
- The Good Faith Exception doesn’t apply when the warrant is a general warrant, issued without probable cause, and executed after being quashed. The form used may be standardized, but that doesn’t excuse the failure to investigate or corroborate the tip. The Fourth Amendment isn’t waived by filling in blanks.
- The FBI accessed my devices after the warrant was quashed—that’s not good faith, that’s misconduct. Whether my public defender challenged it in 2018 or not doesn’t change the fact that the search was unconstitutional. The law doesn’t expire because someone failed to act.
- The State and FBI both knew the case was dismissed when they continued to search. That’s not a misunderstanding—it’s a violation. And the fact that I didn’t retrieve my property doesn’t give them license to search it unlawfully.
- The judge saying the investigation could continue doesn’t override constitutional protections. Investigations can continue—but they must do so lawfully. That’s the entire point of my motion.
- As for your personal attacks and defamatory claims—they’re not just irrelevant, they’re beneath the dignity of this conversation. You can’t manipulate AI to make false accusations and expect that to stand. That’s not clever—it’s reckless.

