I don't believe that is permissible. Not at all.

Ya, he was busted with a stash, fairly large I guess, maybe a bunch of skuff or what not but still, he was busted with.

But that was an illegal search and seizure from what I can tell. That's a BS, low-ball, cheap, and downright wrong way to bust somebody.

If this crap is allowed, even for something that already should be legal, then whats next? Is the ATF or local police gonna wait me out if they see my truck sitting in the parking lot of a bar (not that I even drink much) and see how long I stay there then when I do leave follow me and pull me over?

Profiling is profiling and an illegal search is an illegal search!

Someone gonna tap my phone lines? I mean they are on my property with no clear fence line, whats the diff between the two?

Lines have been crossed here.
Slevinkal Reviewed by Slevinkal on . busted by gps...not me Is your vehicle private property? The answer seems obvious: of course it is. But depending on where you parked it, you might give up some rights in actually keeping it "private." Police can place a tracking device on your car without a warrant, according to recent judgment in California. Earlier this year, an Oregonian named Juan Pineda-Moreno was convicted of growing marijuana after police tracked his car to a suspected growing site. Pineda-Moreno appealed, citing the fact that on two Rating: 5