Fireflyfishing
WKR
I asked Google this:I have an honest and general question of Probable Cause and 4th amendment re: Hunting
I have a decent understanding of the application of PC and 4th amendment in my position. Which are firearms, narcotics, etc.
Arms reach, access to glove boxes and "anywhere you could hide or secret same".
Is part of the "issue" or question.....could you fit a grouse in a glove box? Yea An extra trout? Sure.
I am not at all familiar with the threshold of how reasonable-ness plays out or looks like in game violations.
What articulable facts need to be stacked in a game violation to reach PC? Be interesting to hear.
Exiting a known hunting area, wearing orange, and being present during date/time of lawful hunting I wouldn't think reaches PC.....
Most PC is created at the typewriter. I would guess a Warden with several years of typing is rather good at it.
Admitting you were hunting when passing a Warden as you drove out of a hunting area I don't think would be found Reasonable for PC either. Not even sure Reasonable Suspicion.
“define probable cause for game wardens in montana”
AI gave me this:
In Montana, probable cause for game wardens means having
actual, objective reasons (not just suspicion), based on facts and circumstances, to believe a fish and game law has been violated, allowing warrantless searches of vehicles, boats, and open areas, but requiring warrants for dwellings, with the standard being a reasonable belief in criminal activity for stops, not just general hunches. It's more than a hunch; it's a legal standard requiring specific, articulable facts that would lead an experienced officer to suspect wrongdoing, enabling searches for unlawfully taken game or illegal devices.
Key Elements of Probable Cause for Wardens
Examples of Probable Cause (Inferred)
- Not Just Suspicion: It can't be a mere guess, policy, or hunch; it must be based on actual, credible information or observations.
- Objective Data: Wardens need objective facts that suggest a violation, like seeing someone with an illegal number of fish, hearing a gunshot in a restricted area, or finding prohibited bait.
- Totality of Circumstances: Courts look at all the facts together to decide if probable cause exists for a specific stop or search.
- Warrantless Searches Allowed (Specific Areas): For vehicles, boats, tents (not residences), and open fields, wardens can search without a warrant if they have probable cause.
- Warrants Needed for Dwellings: A search warrant is required to search a residence or dwelling.
- Peace Officer Powers: Wardens have peace officer status for fish and game enforcement, allowing searches, seizures, and arrests when probable cause is established.
Legal Basis
- A warden sees hunters near a "No Hunting" sign with fresh game and no licenses.
- A boat operator is fishing with illegal gear (like a gill net).
- A vehicle smells strongly of freshly killed game, but the occupants have no tags or licenses.
- Montana Code Annotated (MCA) § 87-1-506 grants wardens broad search and seizure powers with probable cause.
- Montana's Constitution (Art. II, Sec. 11) protects against unreasonable searches, but this is balanced with specific statutes for wildlife enforcement.