The smell of burnt marijuana is no longer grounds to search a vehicle, the Illinois Supreme Court ruled Thursday.
The Illinois Supreme Court ruled 6-0 that without other suspicious circumstances, such as a driver failing to stop for some ...
In a 6-0 ruling, the court found that cannabis laws in Illinois had evolved to the point that just catching a whiff of burnt ...
An odor of burnt marijuana doesn't justify a search of a car without a warrant in Illinois, the state Supreme Court said ...
Indiana is a legal cannabis island, with all states around us having legalized weed in some form. Kentucky will offer ...
Citing significant changes in Illinois marijuana laws, Justice P. Scott Neville Jr. wrote that an Illinois state police ...
The smell of burnt cannabis alone is insufficient to justify a warrantless police search of an automobile, the Illinois ...
An odor of burnt marijuana doesn’t justify a search of a car without a warrant in Illinois, the state Supreme Court said Thursday.
The licenses, intended for small and minority-owned businesses, were awarded to LLCs tied to a Wyoming company whose true ...
Where might Hoosiers gather these days for good times? How about a Friday night high school football game, a Saturday ...