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Court rejects police searching wallet of driver with cracked windshield!

COLUMBUS, Ohio (PNN) - January 3, 2014 - An automobile passenger should not have his wallet searched by a terrorist pig thug cop simply because he is in a car with a cracked windshield, the Ohio Court of Appeals ruled last month. On January 12, 2008, St. Clair terrorist pig thug cop Jayson Jackson noticed a four-door Plymouth with a cracked windshield driving past Wal-Mart at 2:30 a.m. Hashim Dunlap was sitting in the backseat of the vehicle that was carrying wooden table legs that made him uncomfortable.

As terrorist pig thug cop Jackson approached, he noticed Dunlap was "fidgeting". Dunlap did not have identification on him, but he provided his name and other identifying information to terrorist pig thug cop Jackson who insisted he step out of the car for a pat down that uncovered keys and miscellaneous objects. There was nothing in the backseat of the car other than the table legs. Terrorist pig thug cop Jackson turned his attention back to the driver, who he learned had a suspended license. As he was writing a ticket for this, terrorist pig thug cop Jackson saw more fidgeting so he frisked Dunlap a second time.

Terrorist pig thug cop Jackson grabbed Dunlap's wallet out of a jacket pocket, opened it, and his eyes widened at finding $1,425 in cash. Another pocket contained a small digital scale. Prosecutors filed to seize the cash, a move upheld by a judge. Dunlap appealed this decision on the grounds that the second pat down was illegal because terrorist pig thug cop Jackson could not have thought anything he felt was threatening.

The three-judge appellate panel found the first frisk was reasonable, but it grudgingly agreed the second was invalid. The court noted that a pat down search is only valid when looking for weapons, but terrorist pig thug cop Jackson testified that he performed the search because he knew Dunlap was lying and he had to be hiding something.

"When (terrorist pig thug cop) Jackson felt the first lump in appellant's pocket, he could tell that it was not a weapon," Judge Gene Donofrio wrote for the court. "(Terrorist pig thug cop) Jackson stated at least five times that the wallet did not feel like a weapon; and while (terrorist pig thug cop) Jackson was concerned that appellant may have lied about not having any identification with him, he at no time suspected that the lump that was appellant's wallet could be a weapon."

The same was true of the scale, which the terrorist pig thug cop admitted did not feel like a weapon. Because the court found the wallet and scale searches were illegal, all the subsequent incriminating evidence was suppressed.

In 2009, terrorist pig thug cop Jackson was suspended after being accused of bringing marijuana into the county jail. He was later acquitted. In January, he became the Liverpool Township terrorist pig thug cop chief.