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Federal Criminal Defense Attorney Hope C. Lefeber Discusses Recent 3rd Circuit Case Ruling That A Person Has No Fourth Amendment Protection When Using Shared Wi-Fi
June 24th, 2014
Last week was a busy week for the Fourth Amendment in the Courts of Appeal. On the same day that the Eleventh Circuit ruled that the Fourth Amendment covers data obtained from cell towers, the Third Circuit in U.S. v. Stanley ruled that the Fourth Am…
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Federal Criminal Lawyer, Hope Lefeber, Discusses 11th Circuit Ruling Holding Cell Phone Tracking Unconstitutional
June 19th, 2014
On June 11, 2014, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit ruled that obtaining data from a cell phone tower without “probable cause” violated the Fourth Amendment. In U.S. v. Quartavious Davis, the Court of Appeals ruled that individuals h…
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Supreme Court Hears Arguments On Whether Police Need Search Warrant for Cellphones
April 29th, 2014
In a major test of how to interpret the Fourth Amendment and privacy rights in the digital age, the Supreme Court heard arguments today about whether the police need warrants to search the cellphones of the people they arrest. The courts have long al…
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Categories: Drug Crimes, Federal Law, Federal Violations and Crimes, Fourth Amendment, Fraud, Government Fraud, Search and Seizure, Securities, Sentencing and Appeals, Tax, White Collar Crimes
Tags: Acquittal, Drug Crimes, Evidence, federal charges, Fourth Amendment, Fraud, health care, Hope C. Lefeber, Hope Lefeber, Insurance Fraud, Mail and Wire Fraud, money laundering, Mortgage Fraud, New York City criminal defense lawyer or attorney, not guilty, philadelphia defense attorney, Possession With Intent To Deliver, Search and Seizure, Securities, white collar crime, White Collar Crimes
Federal Criminal Attorney Hope Lefeber Comments on Supreme Court Decisions Affecting Fourth and Fifth Amendment Rights
April 9th, 2014
The United States Supreme Court has limited a criminal defendant's ability to fight the pretrial restraint of assets in its decision in Kaley v. United States, 134 S. Ct. 1090 (2014). In addition, the Supreme Court has held that the consent of one oc…
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Prosecutorial Misconduct
February 25th, 2014
The U.S. Supreme Court has granted review in a murder case where Virginia prosecutors hid exculpatory evidence and defied a federal judge in a death-penalty case. This could be a pivotal moment for the enforcement of the “Brady Rule.” The case, W…
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Categories: Drug Crimes, Federal Law, Federal Violations and Crimes, Fourth Amendment, Fraud, Government Fraud, Search and Seizure, Securities, Sentencing and Appeals, Tax, White Collar Crimes
Tags: Acquittal, Drug Crimes, Due process, federal jury, Federal Sentencing, Fraud, Hope C. Lefeber, Hope Lefeber, Insurance Fraud, Mail and Wire Fraud, money laundering, New York City criminal defense lawyer or attorney, Possession With Intent To Deliver, Prosecutorial Misconduct, Securities, Specific Intent Crimes, structuring, white collar crime, White Collar Crimes
What Makes A Good Criminal Defense Trial Lawyer?
December 9th, 2013
What Makes a Great Trial Lawyer? LawCrossing.com asked “What makes a great trial lawyer?” and Hope C. Lefeber weighed in. What are the two crucial traits to succeed in the courtroom? Lefeber says it’s passion and amazing communication skills. …
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Categories: Drug Crimes, Federal Law, Federal Violations and Crimes, Fourth Amendment, Fraud, Government Fraud, Search and Seizure, Securities, Sentencing and Appeals, Tax, White Collar Crimes
Tags: Acquittal, Drug Crimes, Due process, federal jury, Federal Sentencing, Fraud, health care, Hope Lefeber, Insurance Fraud, Mail and Wire Fraud, money laundering, not guilty, philadelphia defense attorney, Possession With Intent To Deliver, Securities, Specific Intent Crimes, structuring, tax crimes, white collar crime, White Collar Crimes
Fourth Amendment Violated By Houseguest's Consent to Search
November 30th, 2013
In United States v. Omar Arreguin, 12-50484 (november 22, 2013), the Ninth Circuit held that Appellant’s Fourth Amendment rights had been violated when a houseguest gave agents permission to search. Appellant’s motion to suppress evidence…
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