Wasn’t the bottle of medication already in her purse? If this were an open bottle of booze, they’d likely be able to smell it, especially given that a wreck like they described would have likely broken and spilled in the vehicle, thereby, giving them probable cause to search. What gave them the right to search her purse, otherwise?
What a scumbag. When you lose control of a vehicle,slam it into a concrete barrier, and sustain injuries so severe you have to be airlifted to a hospital, the police should have the right to see if a medication played a role. Or maybe it wasn’t medication at all. My guess is this “officer of the court” (joke) is a nut job who’s taking some kind of psych meds and doesn’t want it known as it would damage her ability to attract clients.
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So this means that after a crash a woman can put an open bottle of booze in her purse and it can’t be checked?
Wasn’t the bottle of medication already in her purse? If this were an open bottle of booze, they’d likely be able to smell it, especially given that a wreck like they described would have likely broken and spilled in the vehicle, thereby, giving them probable cause to search. What gave them the right to search her purse, otherwise?
Afraid the medication might match her blood level medication OD and caused her to crash?
What a scumbag. When you lose control of a vehicle,slam it into a concrete barrier, and sustain injuries so severe you have to be airlifted to a hospital, the police should have the right to see if a medication played a role. Or maybe it wasn’t medication at all. My guess is this “officer of the court” (joke) is a nut job who’s taking some kind of psych meds and doesn’t want it known as it would damage her ability to attract clients.