High court: Smell of burnt cannabis is not cause for warrantless vehicle search

By HANNAH MEISEL
Capitol News Illinois
hmeisel@capitolnewsillinois.com

Law enforcement officers in Illinois cannot rely on the smell of burnt cannabis alone to justify searching a vehicle without a warrant, the Illinois Supreme Court ruled on Thursday.

The decision was unanimous, though Justice Lisa Holder White did not take part in it. Writing for the court, Justice P. Scott Neville pointed to Illinois’ landmark 2019 law legalizing recreational cannabis, which decriminalized the possession of the drug up to 30 grams.

“The laws on cannabis have changed in such a drastic way as to render the smell of burnt cannabis, standing alone, insufficient to provide probable cause for a police officer to search a vehicle without a warrant,” Neville wrote in a 20-page opinion.

The case stems from September 2020, when Ryan Redmond was pulled over by an Illinois State Police trooper on Interstate 80 in Henry County, just east of the Quad Cities. Redmond’s license plate was allegedly not properly secured to his vehicle, and he was driving three miles above the speed limit, according to court records.

But during the interaction, the trooper allegedly smelled burnt cannabis in Redmond’s vehicle and upon searching the vehicle, he found approximately a gram of cannabis in the car’s center console.

Redmond was later charged with a misdemeanor for failure to transport cannabis in an odor-proof container.

The court found that the trooper’s detection of the “burnt cannabis” odor in the vehicle “certainly established reasonable suspicion to investigate further,” but noted that the officer’s further investigation yielded nothing more, including no signs that Redmond’s driving was impaired. Therefore, Neville wrote, the officer’s reasonable suspicion should have never advanced to “probable cause to search.”

Though the court acknowledged the trooper’s initial suspicion that Redmond could’ve “smoked cannabis in the car at some point” was not out of the realm of possibility, Neville pointed out that the officer not only “observed no signs of impairment” but also found no drug paraphernalia or evidence of cannabis use in the car on further investigation.

The trooper “also did not smell the odor of burnt cannabis on Redmond, which undercuts the reasonable belief that Redmond had recently smoked cannabis inside the vehicle while on an Illinois highway,” the opinion said.

The court heard Redmond’s case in January, alongside arguments in a related case focused on the section in Illinois law that requires cannabis be stored in a sealed, odor-proof container if being transported in a car.

Read more: Illinois Supreme Court to determine if cannabis odor can be cause for vehicle search

In that case, an Illinois State Police trooper pulled over a car for speeding in rural Whiteside County, also near the Quad Cities, and then arrested the passenger of the vehicle for unlawful possession of cannabis. According to court records, Vincent Molina’s December 2020 arrest came after the officer found a small box of rolled joints in a vehicle search predicated on the smell of raw cannabis in the car, though Molina told the officer he had a medical cannabis card.

Though the Supreme Court heard the cases in consolidated arguments earlier this year, the justices only ruled on Redmond’s case Thursday. The decision briefly mentioned the Molina case in a footnote saying the court was not addressing “the validity of the odor-proof container requirement” in the Redmond decision.

Ahead of the joint oral arguments in January, national and state-level chapters of the American Civil Liberties Union and the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers filed a brief in support of Molina and Redmond, writing that allowing the odor of cannabis as cause for searching a vehicle will lead to biased enforcement against Black and Latino Illinoisans.

“There is a decades-long pattern of police in this state using pretext like cannabis odor to disproportionately stop and search Black and Latino drivers,” the brief reads. Illinois’ stop and search policy “unfairly subjects (Black and Latino drivers) to at-will intrusions of their privacy and relegates them to second-class citizenry.”

The organizations argued the legalization of cannabis means its presence is not indicative of contraband or crime.

Thursday’s opinion also noted that other states agree, holding up a Kansas Supreme Court decision from earlier this year as an example. High courts in other states, including Minnesota, Delaware, New Jersey, Pennsylvania and Vermont have ruled similarly, though Wisconsin’s Supreme Court decided the opposite in a 2023 ruling.

Other states have also passed laws prohibiting warrantless searches of vehicles based solely on the smell of cannabis. But a similar effort in Illinois stalled last year as the Redmond and Molina cases were pending.

Dilpreet Raju contributed.

Vigo County Accident Sends One to the Hospital 

Vigo County - September 19, 2024, at approximately 8:40 a.m., troopers from the Indiana State Police Putnamville Post responded to an accident involving a semi tractor-trailer and two other vehicles on Interstate 70 near the sixteen-mile marker eastbound.  

The preliminary crash investigation by Trooper Brad Fyfe revealed that Corey R. Yund, age 34, of Crawfordsville, Indiana, was driving a 2020 Ford truck westbound on Interstate 70 and suddenly reduced his speed near the sixteen-mile marker to make an illegal U-turn at the interstate turnaround.  This is when Tyler A. Nusbaumer, age 21, of Indianapolis, driving a 2017 Dodge truck, struck Yund in the rear.  This collision forced Yund’s truck to travel south into the median then into the eastbound driving lane of Interstate 70.  Yund was then struck by a 2021 Freightliner semi tractor-trailer being driven by Haiguang Zhong, age 42, of Rosemead, California.  This collision forced Yund’s truck back into the median, where it eventually stopped, facing east.  Zhong’s tractor-trailer traveled off the south side of Interstate 70 coming to a stop.  

Upon the arrival of the first responders, Yund was extracted from the vehicle and transported by ambulance to a local hospital, for further medical care. There were no other injuries reported.

Trooper Fyfe was assisted at the crash scene by several troopers of the Putnamville Post, Riley Fire Department, Trans Care, and Edington’s Wrecker Service 

Yund was cited for making an illegal U-turn.  

The Indiana State Police Putnamville Post wants to encourage all motorists to not make illegal U-turns and to follow all signs posted on the roadways. 

Marion Man Sentenced to 8+ Years in Prison on Child Pornography Charges

BENTON, Ill. – A district judge sentenced a Marion man to 97 months’ imprisonment for receiving and possessing child pornography.

Michael D. Mitchell, 36, pleaded guilty in May to two counts of receipt of child pornography and one count of possession of child pornography.

“The U.S. Attorney’s Office will continue to prosecute individuals who view and upload child sexual abuse material, and a federal prison sentence is warranted for those who contribute to the online sexual exploitation of children,” said U.S. Attorney Rachelle Aud Crowe. “I commend our FBI partners for their efforts to identify and investigate child predators.”

According to court documents, federal law enforcement received an online tip from an internet platform for a user uploading child pornography. Agents tracked the IP address associated with the user to Mitchell’s Marion residence. Following a subsequent search of Mitchell’s phone, agents recovered eight items of child sexual abuse material.

“This case demonstrates the effectiveness of the FBI’s partnership with the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children,” said FBI Springfield Field Office Special Agent in Charge Christopher Johnson. “FBI Springfield opened this investigation based on a tip from NCMEC’s Cyber Tipline which allows parents and children to report child sexual abuse material and other incidents of sexual exploitation of children. Thanks to that tip, another offender is behind bars, no longer able to contribute to the spread of child sexual abuse material.”

Upon release from prison, the judge ordered Mitchell to serve five years of supervised release.

The FBI Springfield Field Office led the investigation, and Assistant U.S. Attorney David Sanders prosecuted the case.

This case was brought as part of Project Safe Childhood, a nationwide initiative to combat the growing epidemic of child sexual exploitation and abuse, launched in May 2006 by the Department of Justice. Led by U.S. Attorneys’ Offices and CEOS, Project Safe Childhood marshals federal, state, and local resources to better locate, apprehend and prosecute individuals who exploit children via the internet, as well as to identify and rescue victims.

Hazleton man arrested for attempting to interfere with drug screen

On September 18, 2024, at 9 a.m. Gibson County Community Corrections personnel reached out to Sheriff Bruce Vanoven to inform him that a client had attempted to use a device to interfere with a probation mandated urine test.  Sheriff Vanoven went to the Community Corrections facility and began an investigation into the incident.  In doing so he collected statements from Facility Officer Tracy Hurst who recovered device and placed the client into an interview room.  Sheriff Vanoven then questioned 29 year old Dakota Whitehouse of Hazleton about the incident.  At the conclusion of his investigation he placed Mr. Whitehouse into custody and transported him to the Gibson County Jail where he was charged with a B Misdemeanor of Interfering with a Drug or Alcohol Screening Test.

 All criminal defendants are to be presumed innocent until, and unless proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt in a court of law.

IECC Board of Trustees Report

The Board of Trustees of the Illinois Eastern Community College District No. 529 met Tuesday night, September 17th at Wabash Valley College, Mt. Carmel, Illinois.

IECCEA Representative Rob Mason presented the Board with results of a faculty survey. Chancellor Gower updated the Board on capital projects and solicited Board direction on Procedure 300.17 pertaining to usage of IECC facilities.

The Board approved the minutes of the Board of Trustees meeting held on August 20, 2024.

The 2024 Annual Security Report, 2024 Emergency Response Plans, and an updated Violence Prevention Plan were accepted by the Board. The Board approved the SAFE (Sexual Assault and Family Emergencies) Memoranda of Understanding, PREVAIL (Preventing Sexual Violence in Higher Education Act) Memoranda of Understanding, and a Memorandum of Understanding with Wabash General Hospital for a Paramedic Education Program.

Affiliation agreements were approved with Deaconess Gibson Hospital; DeveloPeds Therapy LLC (PTA); Edwards County Ambulance Service; Hella Healthcare of Olney LLC; Oakview Nursing and Rehab; ProRehab, Inc (PTA); Providence Medical Group; Richland County TB and Health Office; Richland Nursing & Rehab; Wayne County Ambulance; Healthcare Therapy Services, Inc. (PTA); Lawrence County Memorial Hospital; The Carle Foundation; Hospital Sisters Health System; Indiana University Health, Inc. (PTA); and Select Rehab (PTA).

The Board received official notice of the dates concerning the elections to the Board of Trustees that will occur on April 1, 2025. Nominating petitions may be picked up at the District office and the filing period is from November 12 to November 18, 2024. The IECC Board has three Trustees who have terms that are expiring. Trustees will be running for two 6-year terms and one 3-year term. The Board approved the appointment of Sonja Wease as the Election official and the appointment of Sheryl Childers to be the Assistant Election Official.

Board waived a a second reading and approved revisions to the following policies:

• State Gift Ban Act Policy 100.20. 2

• Background Check Determination Policy 500.22 to improve clarity, and the authority references were updated.

• New Prohibiting Sex Discrimination Policy 100.42 to align with the implementation date of the new regulations and deletion of Preventing Sexual Misconduct Policy 100.31.

The Board approved support for the amendment to the Robinson Crawford Enterprise Zone.

The following was approved as part of the personnel report: Approval of employment for Mandy Grepares as Coordinator of Academic Affairs effective September 23, 2024 and position title change for Jamie Carman from Director of Academic Advising and Records to Director of Academic Advising effective September 23, 2024.

Proposed non-college employment was approved for Joseph Brown at JB Express Transportation LLC in Cisne, IL and KTDA Trucking in Mt. Erie, IL.

Resignations were approved for Phil Britton as Head Baseball Coach at Olney Central College effective September 13, 2024; Amanda Kotch as Distance Learning Specialist, Title III effective September 20, 2024; Trevin Milner as Coordinator of Public Information and Marketing at Frontier Community College effective September 27, 2024.

The next regular meeting of the Board of Trustees will be Tuesday, October 15, 2024 at 6:15 p.m. at Frontier Community College, Fairfield, IL.

Gibson County Sheriff's Department Warns Of Jury Duty Scam

From Gibson County Sheriff’s Department:

Be aware of jury duty scams.

We had a report of somebody claiming to be Officer Davis with our department calling people and saying they missed jury duty and that there are now warrants issued for their arrest.

They then ask for personal information and payment information to cancel the warrant.

This is a scam!  

We will not ask for any kind of payment to cancel a warrant.  If there is an actual warrant, it will be something you have to take care of by coming to jail.

The Sheriff's Office does make phone calls regarding jury duty, but we also send letters in the mail.

E-Bike Crash Sends Mt. Carmel Woman To Evansville Hospital

On 9/17/24, at 4:32 pm, Mt. Carmel Police responded to a vehicle versus e-bike collision on Hydraulic Ave just north of the 4th Street intersection.  MCPD along with the Wabash County Sheriff’s Office, Wabash General Ambulance Service, and Mt. Carmel Fire Department responded to the scene and found that a black e-bike, operated by Stephanie A. Holder, age 40, of Mt. Carmel, was traveling northbound when she collided with a white 2002 Dodge truck operated by a 17-year-old male juvenile traveling southbound.  Holder was taken to an Evansville, Indiana area hospital with significant injuries.  A witness near the old Twin Rivers Restaurant noted the Dodge did not appear to be speeding or driving recklessly, before the collision.  Another individual on a different motorized bike was unharmed as they traveled ahead of Holder.  The cause of the collision remains under investigation. 

911 Mapping Helps Locate Domestic Violence Incident

On 9/16/24, Mt. Carmel Police arrested William D. Smith, age 29, currently of Mt. Carmel for Domestic Battery.  On this date, Wabash County 911 received a 911 call where a male subject could be heard making threats of harm to a female subject.  While the telecommunicator could not speak to the caller, they utilized 911 mapping in an attempt to locate the address.  Eventually, officers determined the location in question was a home located in the 900 block of W 5th Street.    Officers arrived to the area and could continue to hear yelling and threats until they made contact.  The above defendant answered the door and was detained pending further investigation.  The officers confirmed this individual was the male subject in question and that he was in a relationship with the female.  The female acknowledged making the call, that the male subject had battered her, and that he would not let her leave the home.  The homeowner was present and also confirmed these ongoing domestic issues.  Smith was placed under arrest and transported to the Wabash County Jail where he was charged and held pending a pre-trial release determination by the court.