1. Legislation should be considered to extend statutory protection to auditors so that they can report reasonable suspicion of fraud to investigatory authorities. 2. Baer, however, said that the officer did not have a reasonable suspicion that she had committed a crime before he opened her trunk. 3. A federal judge in New York ruled in June that people charged with misdemeanors could not be strip-searched unless there was reasonable suspicion that they were hiding something. 4. He ruled that the police did not have reasonable suspicion to pull over the driver even though they had observed four men depositing several bags in the trunk. 5. Never mind that even the lowest constitutional standard the U.S. Supreme Court has created requires reasonable individualized suspicion. 6. Starr has dark and reasonable suspicions about, say, jobs for silence, but he cannot prove them. 7. Stevens also noted that the lower courts had not concluded that there was probable cause or even reasonable suspicion to identify the women to be tested as drug users. 8. The Constitution generally requires that authorities have an reasonable suspicion against someone personally before a search or test can be conducted. 9. The Constitution generally requires that authorities have a reasonable suspicion of wrongdoing by an individual before a search or test can be conducted. 10. The court concluded that there was no reasonable suspicion to pat down the student. |