This cannot be overstated. It always makes me chuckle when people say things like, "The police can't do that," or "That's against my rights." The police can and will do whatever they want. Legally? Maybe. Maybe not. Do you really want to find out?Even if you follow the law there is a risk.
Extreme caution is advisable even within the law. If authorities just suspect the cue or transaction is afoul of the law, the situation can blow up. On a mere suspicion you can lose the cue and/or it can be destroyed...and worse.
Innocent until proven guilty is an ideal rarely achieved.
The best case scenario of the police doing something to you that they weren't legally allowed to do is that you end up being found innocent and win a settlement against them. Even that would take years and tons of legal fees. The worst case scenario is that you end up dead. And every situation between those two scenarios is at its very least going to be a massive PITA. Take the local case below as an example.
"Dean Gillespie, of Fairborn, spent more than 20 years behind bars for sexual assaults he didn’t commit following an investigation by former Miami Twp. detective Matthew Moore. In 2008, he sought and received a new trial claiming evidence — including the identification of an alternative suspect and police reports possibly eliminating him as a suspect — were never turned over to his attorneys.
State and federal courts, along with the Ohio Supreme Court, released Gillespie, exonerated him and admitted he had been “wrongly imprisoned.”
A federal court in 2022 awarded Gillespie a $45 million wrongful conviction verdict, the largest in state history.
Miami Twp. officials say they simply can’t pay a $45 million court judgment against the township even if they cut every service they can for today’s township residents. There is no insurance to cover it, either."